Bankhead National Forest Observatory Opening Approaches

 
Published: 20 August 2024

Main and supplemental sites scheduled to be operational by October 1, 2024

A cluster of sea containers sits on gravel in a forest clearing.
ARM containers fill in the main site of the Bankhead National Forest (BNF) atmospheric observatory in Alabama. Instrument installation at the site will begin in August 2024. Photo is by Patty Campbell, Argonne National Laboratory.

The final push is underway to open the Bankhead National Forest (BNF) atmospheric observatory for business.

Staff from the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) user facility are working in Alabama to have the BNF’s main and supplemental sites operating by October 1, 2024.

ARM wanted to open its newest observatory earlier in the year, but the schedule had to be revised because of delays related to weather, staffing, and receipt of some key electrical components.

After receiving those items, the team turned on power at the main site on August 7 so installation can begin.

Later in the month, instrument installation will start at the main site in the forest and three supplemental sites at Courtland, Double Springs, and Falkville. Installation is currently expected to take about a week at each supplemental site and six weeks at the main site.

After the main and supplemental sites are operational, staff will continue ongoing work to prepare and set up additional BNF sites.

In reviewing ARM’s two proposed scanning radar locations outside the forest, Alabama state and tribal historic preservation officers found that they are not historic or ancestral sites.

With those reviews complete, the BNF site operations team, led by staff at Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois, now awaits an Argonne Site Office review to ensure that the proposed radar activities comply with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The act requires federal agencies, including the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), to consider environmental effects of their proposed actions before making decisions.

Once the final step of the NEPA review is complete, the C-Band Scanning ARM Precipitation Radar and the Ka- and X-band scanning ARM cloud radars will be made operational in preparation to deliver data to users in spring 2025.

A 140-foot (42.7-meter) walk-up tower will be installed about three-quarters of a mile (1,200 meters) west of the main site. Instruments on the tower will sample a variety of properties below, within, and above the forest canopy. The current schedule is to build the tower in November, complete site development in December, and start instrument installation after the holidays in January.

ARM plans to install the instrument field for BNF tethered balloon system flights in January or February. Flights are currently scheduled for March, though the tethered balloon system is still awaiting approval from the Federal Aviation Administration.

Guest Instruments and Research Funding

Clouds block the sun at the Bankhead National Forest supplemental site near Courtland, Alabama. A single ARM container sits between crops and a culvert.
An ARM container is located at the BNF supplemental site near Courtland, Alabama. Photo is by Campbell.

For scientists eager to start fieldwork at the BNF, ARM expects to be able to accommodate guest instruments soon after operations begin at the main site, likely November at the earliest.

Guest instrument deployments require an ARM field campaign proposal. Because research activities at the BNF might also need U.S. Forest Service approval, ARM encourages scientists to plan ahead and submit requests early for any potential guest instrument activities.

Appendix E of the ARM Field Campaign Guidelines includes a flowchart on Page E.3 to help scientists determine if they should propose their field research activity to ARM for coordination with the Forest Service. The flowchart also indicates the timelines that scientists should expect for proposal reviews and approvals. A full breakdown of the timelines follows the flowchart.

“We look forward to hosting as many people and campaigns as proposed,” says BNF Manager Mike Ritsche.

Funding for BNF research is now available from DOE. A new DOE funding opportunity is open for Atmospheric System Research (ASR), Earth and Environmental Systems Modeling (EESM), and Environmental System Science (ESS) program science in the Southeast United States. The announcement leverages the BNF and other recent DOE investments. Learn more about the new funding opportunity.

DOE has held funding opportunities for BNF research in past funding cycles. In July, DOE announced a set of new research projects from an ASR funding opportunity issued in October 2023. One of the principal investigators, Cleveland State University’s Thijs Heus, plans to use BNF data to study contrasts in shallow and deep convection. This is in addition to a group of BNF-focused studies announced in 2023 as part of a larger set of ASR projects.

Uncrewed Aerial System Activities

A mere speck in the air, ARM’s ArcticShark uncrewed aerial system flies over a vast forest. The only visible clearing is the one in which the Black Warrior Work Center and ARM's Bankhead National Forest atmospheric observatory are located. Photo is by Mike Hubbell, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
A mere speck in the air, ARM’s ArcticShark uncrewed aerial system flies over the BNF, as photographed from a chase plane tasked with maintaining visual contact with the aircraft. Photo is by Mike Hubbell, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

The ARM Aerial Facility conducted flights of the ArcticShark uncrewed aerial system over and around the BNF from July 24 through August 7. These science and engineering flights will help the ARM Aerial Facility determine the optimal operational parameters for future missions in the area.

The ArcticShark took off from Cullman Regional Airport and flew in small to large square and rectangular patterns 6 to 34 miles from the airport. Visual observers on the ground and a chase plane in the air tracked the ArcticShark to help ensure safe operations.

During its flights, the ArcticShark collected data on humidity, temperature, cloud composition, aerosols, trace gases, and land surface properties. Data from the flights are freely available through the ARM Data Center.

ARM plans to issue a special call this fall for ArcticShark flights in fiscal year 2025 at the BNF or Southern Great Plains observatory in Oklahoma.

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ARM is a DOE Office of Science user facility operated by nine DOE national laboratories.