Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Tracing troposphere-to-stratosphere transport above a mid-latitude deep convective system
View through CrossRef
Abstract. Within the project SPURT (trace gas measurements in the tropopause region) a variety of trace gases have been measured in situ in order to investigate the role of dynamical and chemical processes in the extra-tropical tropopause region. In this paper we report on a flight on 10 November 2001 leading from Hohn, Germany (52° N) to Faro, Portugal (37° N) through a strongly developed deep stratospheric intrusion. This streamer was associated with a large convective system over the western Mediterranean with potentially significant troposphere-to-stratosphere transport. Along major parts of the flight we measured unexpectedly high NOy mixing ratios. Also H2O mixing ratios were significantly higher than stratospheric background levels confirming the extraordinary chemical signature of the probed air masses in the interior of the streamer. Backward trajectories encompassing the streamer enable to analyze the origin and physical characteristics of the air masses and to trace troposphere-to-stratosphere transport. Near the western flank of the intrusion features caused by long range transport, such as tropospheric filaments characterized by sudden drops in the O3 and NOy mixing ratios and enhanced CO and H2O can be reconstructed in great detail using the reverse domain filling technique. These filaments indicate a high potential for subsequent mixing with the stratospheric air. At the south-western edge of the streamer a strong gradient in the NOy and the O3 mixing ratios coincides very well with a sharp gradient in potential vorticity in the ECMWF fields. In contrast, in the interior of the streamer the observed highly elevated NOy and H2O mixing ratios up to a potential temperature level of 365 K and potential vorticity values of maximum 10 PVU cannot be explained in terms of resolved troposphere-to-stratosphere transport along the backward trajectories. Also mesoscale simulations with a High Resolution Model reveal no direct evidence for convective H2O injection up to this level. Elevated H2O mixing ratios in the ECMWF and HRM model are seen only up to about tropopause height at 340 hPa and 270hPa, respectively, well below flight altitude of about 200 hPa. However, forward tracing of the convective influence as identified by satellite brightness temperature measurements and counts of lightning strokes shows that during this part of the flight the aircraft was closely following the border of an air mass which was heavily impacted by convective activity over Spain and Algeria. This is evidence that deep convection at mid-latitudes may have a large impact on the tracer distribution of the lowermost stratosphere reaching well above the thunderstorms anvils as claimed by recent studies using cloud-resolving models.
Title: Tracing troposphere-to-stratosphere transport above a mid-latitude deep convective system
Description:
Abstract.
Within the project SPURT (trace gas measurements in the tropopause region) a variety of trace gases have been measured in situ in order to investigate the role of dynamical and chemical processes in the extra-tropical tropopause region.
In this paper we report on a flight on 10 November 2001 leading from Hohn, Germany (52° N) to Faro, Portugal (37° N) through a strongly developed deep stratospheric intrusion.
This streamer was associated with a large convective system over the western Mediterranean with potentially significant troposphere-to-stratosphere transport.
Along major parts of the flight we measured unexpectedly high NOy mixing ratios.
Also H2O mixing ratios were significantly higher than stratospheric background levels confirming the extraordinary chemical signature of the probed air masses in the interior of the streamer.
Backward trajectories encompassing the streamer enable to analyze the origin and physical characteristics of the air masses and to trace troposphere-to-stratosphere transport.
Near the western flank of the intrusion features caused by long range transport, such as tropospheric filaments characterized by sudden drops in the O3 and NOy mixing ratios and enhanced CO and H2O can be reconstructed in great detail using the reverse domain filling technique.
These filaments indicate a high potential for subsequent mixing with the stratospheric air.
At the south-western edge of the streamer a strong gradient in the NOy and the O3 mixing ratios coincides very well with a sharp gradient in potential vorticity in the ECMWF fields.
In contrast, in the interior of the streamer the observed highly elevated NOy and H2O mixing ratios up to a potential temperature level of 365 K and potential vorticity values of maximum 10 PVU cannot be explained in terms of resolved troposphere-to-stratosphere transport along the backward trajectories.
Also mesoscale simulations with a High Resolution Model reveal no direct evidence for convective H2O injection up to this level.
Elevated H2O mixing ratios in the ECMWF and HRM model are seen only up to about tropopause height at 340 hPa and 270hPa, respectively, well below flight altitude of about 200 hPa.
However, forward tracing of the convective influence as identified by satellite brightness temperature measurements and counts of lightning strokes shows that during this part of the flight the aircraft was closely following the border of an air mass which was heavily impacted by convective activity over Spain and Algeria.
This is evidence that deep convection at mid-latitudes may have a large impact on the tracer distribution of the lowermost stratosphere reaching well above the thunderstorms anvils as claimed by recent studies using cloud-resolving models.
Related Results
Quantification of the isentropic mass transport across the dynamical tropopause
Quantification of the isentropic mass transport across the dynamical tropopause
A method is developed to quantify the quasi‐horizontal, isentropic mass transport across the dynamical tropopause by small‐scale filaments. This method is based on the contour adve...
Convective impact on the global lower stratospheric water vapor budget
Convective impact on the global lower stratospheric water vapor budget
Water vapor in the stratosphere is primarily controlled by temperatures
in the tropical upper troposphere and lower stratosphere. However, the
direct impact of deep convection on t...
Differences in the upper tropospheric and lower stratospheric aerosol composition
Differences in the upper tropospheric and lower stratospheric aerosol composition
<p>The stratosphere and troposphere are the main layers that define a significant part of the atmospheric processes of our planet. They are demarcated by the tropopau...
Stratosphere-Troposphere Exchange during a Typhoon event: A Lagrangian approach.
Stratosphere-Troposphere Exchange during a Typhoon event: A Lagrangian approach.
The characterization of the stratosphere-troposphere exchange (STE) is fundamental to its role in the global atmospheric budget of chemical constituents. The troposphere-to-stratos...
Spatio-temporal aggregation of convective cell clusters in European MCSs
Spatio-temporal aggregation of convective cell clusters in European MCSs
Mesoscale Convective Systems (MCSs) are organized collections of thunderstorms that typically consist of narrow, intense regions of convective precipitation alongside broader, ligh...
Climatic Effects of Hygroscopic Growth of Sulfate Aerosols in the Stratosphere
Climatic Effects of Hygroscopic Growth of Sulfate Aerosols in the Stratosphere
<p>Deliberate climate intervention by injection of sulfate aerosols in the stratosphere is a method proposed to counter anthropogenic climate warming. In such an inje...
Influence of High Latitude Sudden Stratospheric Warming on Tropical Weather: Observations From a 205 MHz Stratosphere Troposphere Radar and Surface Meteorological Parameters
Influence of High Latitude Sudden Stratospheric Warming on Tropical Weather: Observations From a 205 MHz Stratosphere Troposphere Radar and Surface Meteorological Parameters
AbstractThe study illustrates the evidence of dynamical coupling between the high‐latitude sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) events that occurred in three consecutive winter seaso...
Atmospheric pCO2 sensitivity to the biological pump in the ocean
Atmospheric pCO2 sensitivity to the biological pump in the ocean
In models of the global carbon cycle, the pCO2of the atmosphere is more sensitive to the chemistry of the high‐latitude surface ocean than the tropical ocean. Because sea‐surface n...

