Title: Tropopause Folding and Stratosphere-Troposphere Exchange (STE)
1Tropopause FoldingandStratosphere-Troposphere
Exchange (STE)
http//www.gsfc.nasa.gov/gsfc/earth/pictures/2003/
1117aura/frontF.mpg
- AOSC 637 Presentation
- David Kuhl
2Overview
- Background
- Climatological tropopause
- General circulation of Stratosphere
- Mechanisms for tropopause folding
- Other STE mechanisms
- Seasonality in STE
- Conclusions
3Main References
- Holton, J.R. et al. 1995 Stratosphere-troposphere
exchange. Rev. Geophys. Vol. 33, pp 403-439. - United States Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) (2006), Air Quality Criteria for Ozone
and Related Photochemical Oxidants, Vol.1. - World Meteorological Organization (WMO),
Atmospheric ozone 1985, WMO 16, Geneva,
Switzerland, 1986.
4Background Earths Atmosphere
- Troposphere Mixed Layer near the surface
- Neg. Temp. Gradient
- Pos. Lapse Rate (unstable)
- Low in ozone O(0.1 ppm)
Troposphere
5Background Earths Atmosphere
- Stratosphere Stratified Layer above the
Troposphere - Pos. Temp. Gradient
- Neg. Lapse Rate (stable)
- High in ozone O(10 ppm)
Stratosphere
Troposphere
6Background Earths Atmosphere
- Tropopause Layer between Troposphere and
Stratosphere - Temp. Gradient lt
- 2 K/km
Stratosphere
Tropopause
Troposphere
7Background Earths Atmosphere
Mesosphere
Stratosphere
Tropopause
Troposphere
8Background Earths Atmosphere
Thermosphere
Mesosphere
Stratosphere
Tropopause
Troposphere
9Stratospheric Air Tropospheric Air
- Stratospheric Air
- High Ozone which is good for protecting life from
harmful radiation from the sun - At times it was high in radiation (In the 1950s
and 1960s from nuculer bomb testing) - High in potential vorticity (values greater than
1) - Tropospheric Air
- Low Ozone which is good since ozone is not good
for plants or animals - Low in radiation
- Low in potential vorticity (values less than 1)
- The thermal gradients keep the two air masses
from mixing most of the time
10Climatalogical Tropopause
- Tropospause low at mid-latitudes and poles where
jet streams and storm tracks occur - Tropospause high at the equator where large
amounts of convection occurs
Climatological Mean Tropopause Structure
Tropopause
Pole
Equator
Figure 3 Holton et. al 1995
11Climatalogical Tropopause
- Fluid parcels tend to follow lines of constant
potential temperature - Lines of constant potential temperature are
isentropes - Transport occurs across isentropes is caused
diabatic heating and turbulent mixing. - In General the atmosphere tends to flow along
isentropes
Tropopause
Isentrope
Figure 3 Holton et. al 1995
12Tropical Transport
- In the tropics we see diabatic or moist adiabatic
heating, fueled by water vapor, producing rapid
vertical transport across the insentropes in
convective cells. - Sometimes this transport even reaches past the
troposphere and into the stratosphere - This is the main input and mechanism for
transport into the stratosphere from the
troposphere.
Tropopause
Isentrope
Figure 3 Holton et. al 1995
13Midlatitude/Polar Transport
- In the midlatitudes and polar regions (shown
through in-situ measurements) downward transport
of stratospheric air into the troposphere occurs
along the sloping lines of constant potential
temperature - In this way the transport is adiabatic and
requires no heating to drive it.
Tropopause
Isentrope
Figure 3 Holton et. al 1995
14Climatalogical Tropopause
- Upper Stratosphere
- Area above highest isentrope over the tropics
- Lower Stratosphere
- Area between Upper Stratosphere and tropopause
-
- Mixing occurs between troposphere and
stratosphere in this lower stratospheric area
Upper Stratosphere
Low Stratosphere
Troposphere
Figure 3 Holton et. al 1995
15Motivation
- So why do we care when and how the stratospheric
air mass mixes with the tropospheric air mass? - When mixing occurs it
- depletes the stratosphere of helpful chemical
constituents - increases the levels of harmful chemicals in the
troposphere - Mixing regions are areas of interest for
atmospheric chemistry because combining parcels
of air with differing compositions and lifetimes
provides potential for reactions
16Motivation
- Chemical species with sources in the troposphere
and sinks high in the stratosphere, such as - Methane
- Nitrous oxide
- Chlorofluoro carbons
- Transport maybe viewed as part of global scale
circulation - Chemical species with sources in the high
stratosphere and sinks in the troposphere are
similar so that transport maybe viewed as part of
global scale circulation - However for Chemical species with sources or
sinks in this lower-stratospheric/upper-tropospher
ic area - Aircraft emission
- Heterogeneous chemistry responsible for ozone
depletion - Tropospheric nonurban photochemical ozone
production - It very important to understand the complete
dynamics of the transport between the air masses.
17History
- STE is not the only way to create tropospheric
ozone! - Previous to 1973 it was thought that tropospheric
ozone was produced by only dynamic processes
transporting from high levels in the stratosphere
into the troposphere - Then in 1973 Chameides and Walker produced the
photochemical theory for tropospheric ozone where
they believed that most tropospheric ozone came
from photo-chemistry (primarily from methane
oxidation) - In 1976 Chatfield and Harrison questioned the
1973 Chameides and Walker photochemical
hypothesis - Now general consensus is that The abundance and
distribution of ozone in the atmosphere is
determined by complex interactions between
meteorology and chemistry. (p. AX2-60 2006 EPA)
18Global Budgets of Trop. Ozone
IPCC 4th Assessment
Strat-Trop Exchange Chemical Production
770 /- 400 Tg/yr 3420 /- 770 Tg/yr
- Strat-Trop Exchange accounts for 18 of Ozone in
the troposphere (with a range of 8-44 -- large
amount of error!) - Although photochemistry in the lower troposphere
is the major source of tropospheric ozone, the
stratosphere-troposphere transport of ozone is
important to the overall climatology, budget and
log-term trends of tropospheric ozone. Hocking
2007
19Tropopause Folding
- From experimental and computational modeling
research it has been shown that tropopause
folding accounts for a major extent of the
tropospheric ozone (EPA 2006) - In the 1985 WMO report it states that tropopause
folding could account for as much as 20 of the
tropospheric ozone (though this is an old number
and people are still trying to get a hold of the
magnitude)
20Tropopause Folding
- First Theorized in the 1950s (Reed 1955) and
later proven using many different methods looking
at tracers such (Danielsen 1968) - Radiation
- Radiation injected into the stratosphere prior to
the 1958 moratorium on nuclear testing - Ozone
- Produced in the stratosphere due to solar
radiation - Potential Vorticity
- Conserved quantity with no diabatic heating or
turbulent mixing - High values in the stratosphere and low values in
the troposphere
21Potential Vorticity
p. 96 Holton 2004
- Relationship between the relative vorticity,
Coriolis parameter, gravity, gradient of
potential temperature in pressure coordinates - Transport only occurs along lines of constant
potential vorticity unless you have diabatic
heating or turbulent mixing (p. 108 Holton 2004).
- The conservation holds true for weather
disturbances such as jets and fronts (p. 110
Holton 2004) where tropopause folding occurs - Thus potential vorticity is a good tracer for
stratospheric air masses and tropopause folding
events
22Tropopause Folding
- Tropopause folding occurs in areas with large
vertical shear and strong meridional thermal
gradients (p.144 Holton 2004)
http//www.srh.noaa.gov/jetstream/global/jet.htm
Pole
Equator
23Tropopause Folding
- Tropopause folding occurs in areas with large
vertical shear and strong meridional thermal
gradients (p.144 Holton 2004)
http//www.srh.noaa.gov/jetstream/global/jet.htm
Large Vertical Shear
Strong meridional Thermal gradient
24Tropopause Folding
- Tropopause folding occurs in areas with large
vertical shear and strong meridional thermal
gradients (p.144 Holton 2004)
http//www.srh.noaa.gov/jetstream/global/jet.htm
Large Vertical Shear Polar Jet core 140mph Up
to 275mph
Strong meridional Thermal gradient
Cold Polar Air
Warm Tropical Air
25Tropopause Folding
Polar Jet
Holton 2004
Zonal Wind (m/s)
- A common situation with tropopause folding is
shown in the figure from January 14, 1999 00 UTC
80W logitude - The above figure clearly shows a strong polar jet
core above a cold front at the surface
Pot. Temp.
Cold Front
26Tropopause Folding
Polar Jet
Holton 2004
Zonal Wind (m/s)
- A common situation with tropopause folding is
shown in the figure from January 14, 1999 00 UTC
80W logitude - The lower figure shows potential vorticity
contours dipping deep into the troposphere from
the stratosphere
Pot. Temp.
PV
Polar Air
Trop. Air
Cold Front
27Tropopause Folding
Polar Jet
Holton 2004
Zonal Wind (m/s)
- In stituations such as this with a very strong
jet core and a large thermal gradient at the
surface the system may be unstable - So that small perturbations induced into the jet
(or disturbances) amplify. - This is called Baroclinic instability
- The instability depends on the meridional
temperature gradient (particualarly at the
surface)
Pot. Temp.
PV
Polar Air
Trop. Air
Cold Front
28Tropopause Folding
Polar Jet
Holton 2004
Zonal Wind (m/s)
- For those of your familier with atmospheric
dynamics you may recognize this situation as a
perfect precursor for cyclogenisis - Thus tropopause folding events usually occur
along with cyclogenisis
Pot. Temp.
PV
Polar Air
Trop. Air
Cold Front
29 Classic Cyclogenesis
1
2
Strong Polar Jet
Large meridional Thermal gradients
3
4
http//rst.gsfc.nasa.gov/Sect14/Sect14_1d.html
30Tropause Folding
- A case study from Feb. 23, 1994 12UTC
- This is a common situation for tropopause folding
with a Low pressure system ahead of the fold
31Tropause Folding
Cyclone
- A case study from Feb. 23, 1994 12UTC
- This is a common situation for tropopause folding
with a Low pressure system ahead of the fold
Polar Jet
Cold Front
Polar Jet Core
32Tropause Folding
Cyclone
- A case study from Feb. 23, 1994 12UTC
- This is a common situation for tropopause folding
with a Low pressure system ahead of the fold
Wet Cloudy Sky N and E
Polar Jet
Dry Clear Sky S and SW
Cold Front
Polar Jet Core
33Classic Picture (Danielsen 1968)
South
North
Stratosphere
Tropopause
Troposphere
Danielsen 1968
34Classic Picture (Danielsen 1968)
South
North
Jet
Stratosphere
Tropopause
Troposphere
Danielsen 1968
35Classic Picture (Danielsen 1968)
South
North
Stratospheric Air
Jet
Stratosphere
Troposphereric Air
Tropopause
Troposphere
Danielsen 1968
36Classic Picture (Danielsen 1968)
South
North
Stratospheric Air
Jet
Stratosphere
Troposphereric Air
Tropopause
Mixing of Strat and Trop Air
Troposphere
Warm Air
Cold Air
Danielsen 1968
37Classic Picture (Danielsen 1968)
South
North
Stratospheric Air
Jet
Stratosphere
Troposphereric Air
Tropopause
Mixing of Strat and Trop Air
Troposphere
Warm Air
Cold Air
Wet Cloudy Sky N and E
Dry Clear Sky S and SW
Danielsen 1968
38Tropopause Folds
- The result is an irreversible transfer of
stratospheric air from the polar reservoir to
lower latitudes and to lower altitudes - Shapiro 1980 estimated observationally that 50
of the mass within a fold is exchanged with
tropospheric air during downward penetration. - Significant intrusions of stratospheric air occur
in ribbons 200 to 100 km in length, 100 to 300
km wide and about 1 to 4 km thick (EPA 2006). - These events occur throughout the year and their
location follows the seasonal displacement of the
polar jet stream
39Tropopause Fold
North
South
http//www.gsfc.nasa.gov/gsfc/earth/pictures/2003/
1117aura/frontF.mpg
Cyclone
Wet Cloudy air
Clear Dry air
40Tropopause Fold Model
- In the model the intrusion crept way down in the
troposphere. Intrusions which reach the surface
are rare. Much more common are intrusions which
penetrate only to the middle and upper
troposphere (EPA 2006). - Though it should be said that even middle and
upper tropospheric ozone is transported to the
surface much quicker than stratospheric air due
to various exchange mechanisms that mix
tropospheric air
41Other STE Mechanisms
- In the areas of tropopause folding there are
other STE mechanism which have been identified. - This is understandable since it is an area with
large cyclones and a fast jetstream - Its very hard to measure and quantify the
contributions from each of these mechanisims - Cutoff Cyclones
- Streamers
- Clear air turbulence
42Cut-off Cyclones
- Some parts of the tongues of stratospheric air
may roll up to form isolated coherent structures
containing high-PV air, generally referred to as
cutoff cyclones - Exchange in cutoff cyclones can occur by
convective or radiative erosion of the
anomalously low tropopause that is characteristic
of cutoff cyclones, by turbulent mixing near the
jet stream associated with the cutoff system, or
as a result of tropopause folding along the flank
of the system
43Streamers
- Streamers are stratospheric Intrusions sheared
into long filamentary structures that often roll
into vortices and mix with with subtropical
tropospheric air - Stretching of stratospheric intrusions to ever
finer scales leads to irreversible transport,
often speeded up by turbulence resulting from
shear instabilities
44Clear Air Turbulence
- CAT occurs in the vicinity of jet streams
(resulting from vertical wind shear instabilities
within tropopause folds) and in the region of
decreasing winds in the stratosphere above the
jet core (Shapiro 1980)
Jet
CAT
45Trop. to Strat. exchange?
- We know that ozone comes down but how do we know
that tropopause folding does this not cause
mixing up into the stratosphere? - We basically know how much ozone is transported
down, and if a similar amount of water vapor was
transported up at the same time there would be
much higher quantities of water vapor in the
stratosphere (which we certainly dont see) - Only in the lowest kilometer or so of the
stratosphere is there evidence of a two-way
exchange.
46Seasonal Cycle (EPA 2006)
- The seasonal cycle of STE ozone is related to the
large scale pattern of tracer transport in the
stratosphere (not the peak in tropospheric
cyclone activity). - During winter in the Northern Hemisphere, there
is a maximum in the poleward, downward transport
of mass, which moves ozone from the the tropical
upper stratosphere to the lower stratosphere of
the polar and midlatitdes. - This global scale pattern is controlled by the
upward propagation of large-scale and small-scale
waves generated in the troposphere. - As the energy from these disturbances dissipates,
it drives this stratosphere circulation. - As a result of this process, there is a
springtime maximum in the total column abundance
of ozone over the poles
47Seasonal Cycle (EPA 2006)
- The concentration of ozone (and other trace
gases) build up in the lower stratosphere until
their downward fluxes into the lower stratosphere
are matched by increased fluxes into the
troposphere - Thus, there would be a springtime maximum in the
flux of ozone into the troposphere even if the
flux of stratospheric air through the tropopause
by tropopause folding remained constant
throughout the year (Holton 1995) - Indeed, cyclonic activity in the upper tropophere
is active throughout the entire year in
transporting air from the lower stratosphere into
the troposphere
48Conclusion
- I hope this gives an idea of the general size and
scale of tropopause folding events and how they
fit into the broader general circulation of the
atmosphere between the stratosphere and
troposphere - Even though we have two seemingly separate layers
(Troposphere and Stratosphere), there is
interaction and how and when interaction occurs
is an important piece of the puzzle for
understanding the chemistry of the earths
atmosphere.
49References
- Danielsen, E.F. 1968 Stratospheric-tropospheric
exchange based upon radioactivity, ozone, and
potential vorticity, J. Atmos. Sci., Vol. 25,
pp. 502-518. - Hocking, W.K. et al. 2007 Detection of
stratospheric ozone intrusions by windprofiler
radars, Nature, Vol. 250, Nov. 8, pp. 281-284. - Holton, J.R. et al. 1995 Stratosphere-troposphere
exchange. Rev. Geophys. Vol. 33, pp 403-439. - Holton, J.R. 2004 An Introduction to Dynamic
Meteorology, 4th Edition, Elsevier Academic
Press. - Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
(2006) Working. Group I Report The Physical
Science Basis Cambridge, United Kingdom
Cambridge University Press - Reed, R.J. 1955 A study of a characteristic
type of upper-level frontogenesis. J. Meteor.
Vol 12, pp. 226-237. - Shapiro, M.A., 1980 Turbulent mixing within
tropopause folds as a mechanism for the exchange
of chemical constituents between the stratosphere
and the troposphere, J. Atmos. Sci., Vol. 37,
pp. 994-1004. - United States Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) (2006), Air Quality Criteria for Ozone
and Related Photochemical Oxidants, Vol.1. - World Meteorological Organization (WMO),
Atmospheric ozone 1985, WMO 16, Geneva,
Switzerland, 1986.
50Thank you!