ATM-9612893 Dickerson , Russell University of Maryland "INDOEX-Field Experiment in the Indian Ocean Contribution for the University of Maryland" The Indian Ocean Experiment (INDOEX) is an international field experiment with participation from France, Germany, India, the Netherlands, and the United States. The main effort under the U.S. component focuses on assessing the role of sulfates and other continental aerosols in global radiative forcing and is being supported jointly by the Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation. In addition, complementary studies involving investigations of a variety of related chemical and radiative processes will be undertaken by scientists from other federal agencies and other international partners. The composite observing system consists of a wide range of platforms, from ships to aircraft, as well as surface-based and balloon measuring systems, and satellite data. The main part of the three year effort will be a four-month intensive field phase which begins January 1999. The ultimate goal of this program is to obtain a better understanding of the decadal and longer time scale climate forcing. The equatorial Indian Ocean during the northeast winter monsoon season provides a unique natural laboratory for this experiment. The experimental area is probably the only place in the world where an air mass which has been modified by intense sources of continental aerosols, anthropogenic trace species, and their reaction products (e.g., sulfates and ozone) from the northern hemisphere comes into contact with the pristine air of the southern hemisphere, which has been transported via cross equatorial monsoonal flow, at the Intertropical Convergence Zone. The juxtaposition of these two very distinct air masses will allow a thorough examination of both the direct and indirect effects of the aerosols on the radiative properties of the atmosphere. The role of Dr. Dickerson and his colleagues in INDOEX is to supply carbon monoxide an d ozone measurements for both the preliminary (1998) and primary (1999) ship cruises, to measure sulfur dioxide and size-segregated aerosol particle composition on the primary cruise, in collaboration with other INDOEX scientists, to measure carbon monoxide and ozone from the island site in Male. The resulting data will be analyzed to obtain insights into the transport meteorology and photochemistry of the region.