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Properties of the 1979 SAM II Antarctic 1.0‐μm extinction coefficients: Implications of dehydration and seasonal evolution of the Antarctic polar vortex
Author(s) -
Wang PiHuan,
Kent Geoffrey S.,
Powell Kathleen A.,
Yue Glenn K.,
Poole Lamont R.,
McCormick M. Patrick
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/1999jd901123
Subject(s) - polar vortex , aerosol , atmospheric sciences , stratosphere , troposphere , extinction (optical mineralogy) , environmental science , polar , vortex , climatology , seasonality , arctic , geology , meteorology , physics , oceanography , mineralogy , astronomy , statistics , mathematics
The present study investigates the 1.0‐μm extinction coefficient measurements obtained in the Antarctic region in 1979 from the Stratospheric Aerosol Measurement (SAM) II, with particular focus on the background aerosol properties. Correlative meteorological information from the National Centers for Environmental Prediction is incorporated in this investigation. The results indicate that the data frequency distribution of the background aerosol extinction coefficient in the local summer and fall can be adequately modeled by using a single‐mode normal distribution, and that a binormal distribution is needed for modeling the distribution in the local winter and spring because of the different characteristics of the aerosols inside and outside the polar vortex. In general, the vertical distribution of the aerosol mean extinction coefficient exhibits two regions of different seasonal variation. Above 16 km the extinction coefficient is the highest during the local summer, and the lowest during the local spring inside the polar vortex. Below 16 km the aerosol seasonal variation is more complex, but the winter enhancement of the aerosol extinction coefficient inside the Antarctic polar vortex is clearly evident. As the season changes from winter to spring, the results inside the Antarctic polar vortex also indicate a reduction in aerosol optical depth in the stratosphere, but no significant changes in the upper troposphere. The present study further indicates that the bottom of the winter polar vortex in Antarctica is located at an altitude as low as 8 to 9 km, which is about 4 to 5 km lower than the bottom of the Arctic polar vortex. This difference may be attributable to the different strengths of the winter polar vortex and the planetary wave activities between the two hemispheres. In summary, the properties of the Antarctic background aerosol are very consistent with the effect of polar stratospheric clouds on the aerosol vertical distribution through their formation, sedimention, and evaporation, and with the seasonal evolution of the polar vortex. Finally, the result of the present study provides valuable opportunities for fully utilizing the multiyear SAM II tropospheric and stratospheric measurements to investigate the aerosol climatology and long‐term variations in the Arctic and Antarctic regions.

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