Abstract We use the idealized tracer experiments and investigate the summertime transport from the surface region of northern India and Tibetan Plateau to the lower stratosphere. It is found that the transport, compared to other surrounding regions, has an overall younger modal age in the northern lower stratosphere away from the tropopause. Analysis of the tracer budget reveals that the tracer is transported to the tropical lower stratosphere rapidly in the first 5 days due to vertical eddy transport and afterward in a month or two advection associated with the Brewer‐Dobson circulation. Meanwhile the tracer is also transported to the northern extratropical lower stratosphere in the first 3 months due to horizontal eddy mixing. The results highlight the uniqueness of the northern India region in the summertime transport to the lower stratosphere and implications for the transport of short‐lived chemical species in the destruction of stratospheric ozone.
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Evaluating Stratospheric Tropical Width Using Tracer Concentrations
Abstract Quantifying the width of the tropics has important implications for understanding climate variability and the atmospheric response to anthropogenic forcing. Considerable effort has been placed on quantifying the width of the tropics at tropospheric levels, but substantially less effort has been placed on quantifying the width at stratospheric levels. Here we probe tropical width in the stratosphere using chemical tracers, which are accessible by direct measurement. Two new tracer‐based width metrics are developed, denoted here as the “1σ method” and the gradient weighted latitude (GWL) method. We evaluate widths from three tracers, CH4, N2O, and SF6. We demonstrate that unlike previously proposed stratospheric width methods using tracers, these metrics perform consistently throughout the depth of the stratosphere, at all times of year and on coarse temporal data. The GWL tracer‐based widths correlate well with the turnaround latitude and the critical level, where wave dissipation occurs, in the upper and midstratosphere during certain months of the year. In the lower stratosphere, the deseasonalized tracer‐based widths near the tropical tropopause correlate with the deseasonalized tropopause‐height based metrics. We also find that tracer‐tracer width correlations are strongest at pressure levels where their chemical lifetimes are similar. These metrics represent another useful way to estimate stratospheric tropical width and explore any changes under anthropogenic forcing.
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- PAR ID:
- 10454405
- Publisher / Repository:
- DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
- Volume:
- 125
- Issue:
- 21
- ISSN:
- 2169-897X
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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