The importance of the tropopause inversion layer in double tropopause formation, an observational analysis
Abstract
Over the past decade the tropopause inversion layer (TIL), a layer of enhanced stability above the thermal tropopause, has been studied in earnest. This atmospheric feature is located within the upper troposphere lower stratosphere (UTLS) region of the atmosphere, a region of key importance for the Earth's radiative budget and hence the climate system. Another atmospheric feature of similar interest to the UTLS community is the double tropopause (DT). A recent modeling studied looked at the development of the DT during the LC1 and LC2 lifecycles and found that the DT would not form without the presence of the TIL and that as the TIL increased in strength so did the DT frequency. This study builds on that recent work by analyzing this relationship using observations to first see if the relationship exists and then to understand why it does exist. For this study HIRDLS temperature data is primarily used and shows that as the strength/stability of the TIL increases in the extratropics so does the frequency of DTs. Other datasets, such as COSMIC and WACCM, are also used in this work to verify these results since HIRDLS could miss shallow (<1 km) TIL layers. The relationship between the TIL and the DT is analyzed further by examining vertical profiles within specified latitude regions and by examining events that specifically highlight their relationship. Further research is already planned which will expand upon this study using model simulations to track air movement within these UTLS structures.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2012
- Bibcode:
- 2012AGUFM.A21H0160P
- Keywords:
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- 3334 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Middle atmosphere dynamics;
- 3362 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Stratosphere/troposphere interactions