“…Stratospheric balloon research devoted to the collection of aerosol profiles vs. height has traditionally been carried out in the last decades with the aim of elucidating properties and processes of this fundamental air component. While as a rule, in situ observations, either onboard stratospheric balloons or onboard aircraft, are fairly demanding and costly (e.g., Sugita et al, 1999;Matsumura et al, 2001;Hervig and Deshler, 2002;Deshler et al, 2003;Kasai et al, 2003;Watanabe et al, 2004;Hunton et al, 2005;Curtius et al, 2005;Shiraishi et al, 2011;Andersson et al, 2013;Murphy et al, 2014), the present paper aims at promoting the forming of young researchers in the spirit of the BEXUS initiative (Balloon-borne Experiments for University Students; see below), but also in elaborating effective and "relatively" cheap experiments to fulfill the need for experimental vertical profiles of aerosol data useful for filling knowledge gaps in atmospheric and climatological research. The A5-Unibo (Advanced Atmospheric Aerosol Acquisition and Analysis) experiment designed by the University of Bologna has been developed with the purpose of collecting and studying vertical profiles of atmospheric ions and particles in addition to atmospheric parameters (temperature, relative humidity, and pressure) all along the flight path of the BEXUS18 stratospheric balloon, using a relatively low-cost and lightweight setup compared to the conventional instrumentation onboard stratospheric balloons.…”