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An Overview of the Lower and Middle Atmosphere Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere Troposphere: -- Ozone Max -- Ozone region Stratosphere: • From the tropopause to ~50km / 1 hPa • Temperature increases to ~273 K at the stratopause (marked by a reversal of the dT/dz trend) • Chemical composition similar to troposphere, except… - Water vapor Low concentration, clouds rare but can happen - Ozone High concentration, up to 4 x 10-4 % by volume In the Stratosphere: Ozone production and destruction is exothermic. O2 + O O3 (production) O3 + O 2O2 (destruction) Produces heat ( λ < 310 nm ) The Chapman Cycle In the Stratosphere: Polar Stratospheric Clouds: • Contain a combination of water, nitric acid and sulfuric acid • One of many things that can destroy ozone • Form below 195 K (~ 15-25 km) Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere Troposphere: Stratosphere: Mesosphere: Ozone region PMCs PSCs -- Ozone Max -- • Between 50 – 80 km • Temperature decreases with height, to 180 K at 80 km, can be as low as 140 K • Polar mesospheric clouds can form near the mesopause (coldest point in the atm), have climate implications Middle atmosphere: Everything between the tropopause and the thermosphere, including the stratosphere and mesosphere Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere Troposphere: Stratosphere: Mesosphere: PMCs Thermosphere: PSCs -- Ozone Max -- Ozone region • • • Temperature increases with height, to 500/2,000 K at 250/500 km (quite/active sun) Increasing T associated with absorption of solar radiation by molecular oxygen Photodissociation of O2 O2 + hν O + O (ionization) (λ 120-210 nm) Charged particles comprise the ionosphere Large Scale Circulations and the Tropopause 15km Stratosphere 20km Troposphere 10km Hadley Cell Ferrel Cell 5km Polar Cell Polar Easterlies 90°N Easterly Trades 60°N 30°N 0° Large Scale Circulations and the Tropopause Stratospheric Tropical Air 20km Stratospheric Midlatitude Air 15km Secondary Tropical Tropopause 10km Stratospheric Arctic Air Hadley Cell Ferrel Cell 5km Troposphere Stratospheric Polar Air Polar Cell Polar Easterlies 90°N Easterly Trades 60°N 30°N 0° Large Scale Circulations and the Tropopause Stratospheric Tropical Air 20km 400 K Stratospheric Midlatitude Air 15km 350 K 330 K 10km Stratospheric Arctic Air 5km 300 K 90°N Stratospheric Polar Air Z: ~12 km T: -60°C θ: ~325-340 K P: 200 hPa Z: ~18 km T: -80°C θ: ~375-400 K P: 80-100 hPa Secondary Tropical Tropopause Z: ~12 km (convective top) Z: ~6-9 km T: -45°C θ: ~300-315 K P: 300-400 hPa 60°N 30°N 0° Tropopause Definitions Thermal Definitions of the Tropopause 1. Lapse Rate Tropopause (LRT): 2 km layer where dT/dt < 2 K km-1 2. Cold Point Tropopause (CPT): level of min. temperature (tropics) 3. Tropical Thermal Tropopause (TTT): Since LRT & CPT are 0.5 km apart (LRT being lower), TTT is combination of the two 4. Secondary Tropical Tropopause (STT): level of max convective outflow 5. Clear-Sky Radiative Tropopause: Clear-sky heating rate = 0; below descent, above ascent Ozone Tropopause • Based on increasing ozone mixing ratio with height. • On synoptic timescales material surface Dynamic Tropopause • Defined by a potential vorticity (PV) surface (±2 or ±1.5 PVU) • For conservative flow material surface • Useful in dynamics (weather!) Tropical Tropopause Layer (TTL) • Region of the tropical atmosphere between the convective outflow and thermal tropopause (~12-17 km) • Coldest T over equatorial W. Pacific • Cold T very low water vapor • Source region of stratospheric air Source: SPARC From the ECMWF/ERA-40 Atlas JJA DJF Climatology of the Lower & Middle Atm Stratospheric Polar Vortex In the Winter Hemisphere: 1. Long dark polar night + 2. O3 heating shuts down + 3. Radiative cooling over pole + 4. Sharp meridional T gradient + 5. Stratospheric westerlies (via thermal wind relationship) = Stratospheric Polar Vortex Air Temperature Wind Speed Winter in the Stratosphere From the ECMWF/ERA-40 Atlas JJA DJF Seasonal Climatology - Lower & Middle Atm From the ECMWF/ERA-40 Atlas JJA DJF Seasonal Climatology - Lower & Middle Atm The Basics: Stratospheric Circulation Winter Hemisphere Longwave cooling Cold pole Cold polar vortex W-ly stratospheric jet W-ly from surface to stratopause Vertically propagating Planetary waves Summer Hemisphere Ozone warming Warm pole Warm pole E-ly stratospheric jet From W-ly to E-ly with height No vertically propagating waves Troposphere-Stratosphere Interaction Source: Natl. Acad. Sci, U.S.A. via SPARC-WCRP 2 Departures from Climatology The Quasi-Biennual Oscillation (QBO) Time-height section of monthly mean zonal winds at equatorial stations: Canton Island, 3°S/172°W (Jan 1953 - Aug 1967) Gan/Maledive Islands, 1°S/73°E (Sep 1967 - Dec 1975) Singapore, 1°N/104°E (since Jan 1976) Isopleths are at 10 m/s intervals; westerlies are shaded (updated from Naujokat, 1986) http://www.geo.fu-berlin.de/en/met/ag/strat/produkte/qbo/index.html http://www.nwra.com/resumes/baldwin/ Departures from Climatology Sudden Stratospheric Warming (SSW) Southern Hemisphere September 2002 Potential vorticity on the 850K isentropic surface (near 10 hPa) Figure from SPARC Sudden Stratospheric Warming of January 2009 http://curriculum.pmartineau.webfactional.com/wp-content/svw_gallery/test/gif/2009_01_28.gif The Basics: Troposphere-Stratosphere Interaction Northern Annular Mode (NAM) A measure of the vertical structure of the AO Source: NCDC/NOAA Measure of the amplitude of the 1000 hPa flow Baldwin and Dunkerton, 2001 3 Sudden Stratospheric Warming of January 2009 Late January SSW Impacts in the troposphere on the order of 45-90 days Downward Propagation What are the dynamics associated with the progression of the height anomalies from the stratosphere to the troposphere??? Sudden Stratospheric Warming Northern Hemisphere January 2013 ATM 525 Case Study Project http://www.atmos.albany.edu/facstaff/andrea/webmaps/2013ssw.html