
Transport and freeze‐drying in the tropical tropopause layer
Author(s) -
Jensen Eric,
Pfister Leonhard
Publication year - 2004
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 - 10.1029/2003jd004022
Subject(s) - tropopause , ice crystals , atmospheric sciences , ice cloud , water vapor , radiosonde , environmental science , kelvin wave , supersaturation , mixing ratio , climatology , troposphere , meteorology , geology , physics , thermodynamics , radiative transfer , optics
We use a Lagrangian, one‐dimensional cloud model to simulate ice cloud formation and dehydration along trajectories in the tropical tropopause layer (TTL). Time‐height curtains of temperature along the trajectory paths are extracted from meteorological analyses. The temperatures are adjusted near the tropopause such that the spatial average cold point temperature matches tropical radiosonde measurements. Temperature perturbations due to Kelvin waves, Rossby gravity waves, and high‐frequency gravity waves are superimposed. The cloud model tracks the growth and sedimentation of individual ice crystals. Ice number densities in the cloud simulations without waves range from <0.001 to ∼0.2 cm −3 ; when clouds form, they dehydrate the air but generally do not reduce the water vapor mixing ratio down to ice saturation. Wave‐driven temperature perturbations result in higher cloud frequencies and cause higher ice number densities (>1 cm −3 ) and smaller crystals (1–10 μm radius), resulting in less sedimentation but still effective dehydration overall. Inclusion of wave‐driven temperature oscillations decreases the final TTL H 2 O mixing ratio somewhat primarily because the wave perturbations decrease the tropical average cold point tropopause temperature by ∼0.75 K. Ultimately, air rising through the TTL is effectively dehydrated with or without wave perturbations. In general, the model results suggest that the final water vapor mixing ratios are primarily controlled by the minimum temperatures encountered by parcels and that they are relatively insensitive to factors such as the wave‐driven temperature variability, the supersaturation threshold for ice nucleation, and the rate of ascent through the tropopause layer. However, the frequency and geographical distribution of cloud formation is very sensitive to these parameters. On average, the clouds dehydrate the air along trajectories down to mixing ratios ∼10–40% higher than the temperature minimum saturation mixing ratio. The simulations predict efficient freeze‐drying of air by cloud formation within the TTL: For the December–January 1995/1996 period simulated the average final H 2 O mixing ratios at the tropopause (370–380 K potential temperature) range from 2.5 to 3.2 ppmv. These values are somewhat lower than the estimates of the stratospheric water vapor entry value from satellite and in situ measurements; hence an additional source of water (such as injection by deep convection) may be required to explain the observed tropical tropopause humidity.