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Ice nucleation and dehydration in the Tropical Tropopause Layer

  • Eric J. Jensen
  • , Glenn Diskin
  • , R. Paul Lawson
  • , Sara Lance
  • , T. Paul Bui
  • , Dennis Hlavka
  • , Matthew McGill
  • , Leonhard Pfister
  • , Owen B. Toon
  • , Rushan Gaog
  • NASA Ames Research Center
  • NASA Langley Research Center
  • SPEC Inc.
  • Science Systems and Applications, Inc.
  • NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
  • University of Colorado Boulder
  • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

120 Scopus citations

Abstract

Optically thin cirrus near the tropical tropopause regulate the humidity of air entering the stratosphere, which in turn has a strong influence on the Earth's radiation budget and climate. Recent highaltitude, unmanned aircraft measurements provide evidence for two distinct classes of cirrus formed in the tropical tropopause region: (i) vertically extensive cirrus with low ice number concentrations, low extinctions, and large supersaturations (up to ~70%) with respect to ice; and (ii) vertically thin cirrus layers with much higher ice concentrations that effectively deplete the vapor in excess of saturation. The persistent supersaturation in the former class of cirrus is consistent with the long time-scales (several hours or longer) for quenching of vapor in excess of saturation given the low ice concentrations and cold tropical tropopause temperatures. The low-concentration clouds are likely formed on a background population of insoluble particles with concentrations less than 100 L -1 (often less than 20 L-1), whereas the high ice concentration layers (with concentrations up to 10,000 L-1) can only be produced by homogeneous freezing of an abundant population of aqueous aerosols. These measurements, along with past high-altitude aircraft measurements, indicate that the low-concentration cirrus occur frequently in the tropical tropopause region, whereas the high-concentration cirrus occur infrequently. The predominance of the low-concentration clouds means cirrus near the tropical tropopause may typically allow entry of air into the stratosphere with as much as ~1.7 times the ice saturation mixing ratio.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2041-2046
Number of pages6
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume110
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 5 2013

Keywords

  • ATTREX
  • Ice nuclei

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