TY - JOUR
T1 - High static stability in the mixing layer above the extratropical tropopause
AU - Kunz, A.
AU - Konopka, P.
AU - Müller, R.
AU - Pan, L. L.
AU - Schiller, C.
AU - Rohrer, F.
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - [1] The relationship between the static stability N2 and the mixing in the tropopause inversion layer (TIL) is investigated using in situ aircraft observations during SPURT (trace gas transport in the tropopause region). With a new simple measure of mixing degree based on O3-CO tracer correlations, high N2 related to an enhanced mixing in the extratropical mixing layer is found. This relation becomes even more pronounced if fresh mixing events are excluded, indicating that mixing within the TIL occurs on a larger than synoptic timescale. A temporal variance analysis of N2 suggests that processes responsible for the composition of the TIL take place on seasonal timescales. Using radiative transfer calculations, we simulate the influence of a change in O3 and H2O vertical gradients on the temperature gradient and thus on the static stability above the tropopause, which are contrasted in an idealized nonmixed atmosphere and in a reference mixed atmosphere. The results show that N2 increases with enhanced mixing degree near the tropopause. At the same time, the temperature above the tropopause decreases together with the development of an inversion and the TIL. In the idealized case of nonmixed profiles the TIL vanishes. Furthermore, the results suggest that H2O plays a major role in maintaining the temperature inversion and the TIL structure compared to O 3. The results substantiate the link between the extratropical mixing layer and the TIL.
AB - [1] The relationship between the static stability N2 and the mixing in the tropopause inversion layer (TIL) is investigated using in situ aircraft observations during SPURT (trace gas transport in the tropopause region). With a new simple measure of mixing degree based on O3-CO tracer correlations, high N2 related to an enhanced mixing in the extratropical mixing layer is found. This relation becomes even more pronounced if fresh mixing events are excluded, indicating that mixing within the TIL occurs on a larger than synoptic timescale. A temporal variance analysis of N2 suggests that processes responsible for the composition of the TIL take place on seasonal timescales. Using radiative transfer calculations, we simulate the influence of a change in O3 and H2O vertical gradients on the temperature gradient and thus on the static stability above the tropopause, which are contrasted in an idealized nonmixed atmosphere and in a reference mixed atmosphere. The results show that N2 increases with enhanced mixing degree near the tropopause. At the same time, the temperature above the tropopause decreases together with the development of an inversion and the TIL. In the idealized case of nonmixed profiles the TIL vanishes. Furthermore, the results suggest that H2O plays a major role in maintaining the temperature inversion and the TIL structure compared to O 3. The results substantiate the link between the extratropical mixing layer and the TIL.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/71949121369
U2 - 10.1029/2009JD011840
DO - 10.1029/2009JD011840
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:71949121369
SN - 0148-0227
VL - 114
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research
IS - 16
M1 - D16305
ER -