The world's highest levels of surface UV

Cordero, RR; Seckmeyer, G.; Damiani, A.; Riechelmann, S.; Rayas, J.; Labbe, F.; Laroze, D

Abstract

Chile's northern Atacama Desert has been pointed out as one of the places on earth where the world's highest surface ultraviolet (UV) may occur. This area is characterized by its high altitude, prevalent cloudless conditions and relatively low total ozone column. Aimed at detecting those peak UV levels, we carried out in January 2013 ground-based spectral measurements on the Chajnantor Plateau (5100 m altitude, 23 degrees 00'S, 67 degrees 45'W) and at the Paranal Observatory (2635 m altitude, 24 degrees 37'S, 70 degrees 24'W). The UV index computed from our spectral measurements peaked at 20 on the Chajnantor Plateau (under broken cloud conditions) and at 16 at the Paranal Observatory (under cloudless conditions). Spectral measurements carried out in June 2005 at the Izana Observatory (2367 m altitude, 28 degrees 18'N, 16 degrees 30'W) were used for further comparisons. Due to the differences in sun-earth separation, total ozone column, altitude, albedo, aerosols and clouds, peak UV levels are expected to be significantly higher at southern hemisphere sites than at their northern hemisphere counterparts.

Más información

Título según WOS: The world's highest levels of surface UV
Título según SCOPUS: The world's highest levels of surface UV
Título de la Revista: PHOTOCHEMICAL & PHOTOBIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volumen: 13
Número: 1
Editorial: SPRINGERNATURE
Fecha de publicación: 2014
Página de inicio: 70
Página final: 81
Idioma: English
URL: http://xlink.rsc.org/?DOI=c3pp50221j
DOI:

10.1039/c3pp50221j

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS