A statistical analysis of the influence of deep convection on water vapor variability in the tropical upper troposphere

The factors that control the influence of deep convective detrainment on water vapor in the tropical upper troposphere are examined using observations from multiple satellites in conjunction with a trajectory model. Deep convection is confirmed to act primarily as a moisture source to the upper trop...

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Main Authors: J. S. Wright, R. Fu, A. J. Heymsfield
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2009-08-01
Series:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Online Access:http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/9/5847/2009/acp-9-5847-2009.pdf
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spelling doaj-434435fa265a4a9f8b97e3007e12e5f32020-11-24T22:49:56ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242009-08-0191558475864A statistical analysis of the influence of deep convection on water vapor variability in the tropical upper troposphereJ. S. WrightR. FuA. J. HeymsfieldThe factors that control the influence of deep convective detrainment on water vapor in the tropical upper troposphere are examined using observations from multiple satellites in conjunction with a trajectory model. Deep convection is confirmed to act primarily as a moisture source to the upper troposphere, modulated by the ambient relative humidity (RH). Convective detrainment provides strong moistening at low RH and offsets drying due to subsidence across a wide range of RH. Strong day-to-day moistening and drying takes place most frequently in relatively dry transition zones, where between 0.01% and 0.1% of Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission Precipitation Radar observations indicate active convection. Many of these strong moistening events in the tropics can be directly attributed to detrainment from recent tropical convection, while others in the subtropics appear to be related to stratosphere-troposphere exchange. The temporal and spatial limits of the convective source are estimated to be about 36–48 h and 600–1500 km, respectively, consistent with the lifetimes of detrainment cirrus clouds. Larger amounts of detrained ice are associated with enhanced upper tropospheric moistening in both absolute and relative terms. In particular, an increase in ice water content of approximately 400% corresponds to a 10–90% increase in the likelihood of moistening and a 30–50% increase in the magnitude of moistening. http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/9/5847/2009/acp-9-5847-2009.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. S. Wright
R. Fu
A. J. Heymsfield
spellingShingle J. S. Wright
R. Fu
A. J. Heymsfield
A statistical analysis of the influence of deep convection on water vapor variability in the tropical upper troposphere
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
author_facet J. S. Wright
R. Fu
A. J. Heymsfield
author_sort J. S. Wright
title A statistical analysis of the influence of deep convection on water vapor variability in the tropical upper troposphere
title_short A statistical analysis of the influence of deep convection on water vapor variability in the tropical upper troposphere
title_full A statistical analysis of the influence of deep convection on water vapor variability in the tropical upper troposphere
title_fullStr A statistical analysis of the influence of deep convection on water vapor variability in the tropical upper troposphere
title_full_unstemmed A statistical analysis of the influence of deep convection on water vapor variability in the tropical upper troposphere
title_sort statistical analysis of the influence of deep convection on water vapor variability in the tropical upper troposphere
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
issn 1680-7316
1680-7324
publishDate 2009-08-01
description The factors that control the influence of deep convective detrainment on water vapor in the tropical upper troposphere are examined using observations from multiple satellites in conjunction with a trajectory model. Deep convection is confirmed to act primarily as a moisture source to the upper troposphere, modulated by the ambient relative humidity (RH). Convective detrainment provides strong moistening at low RH and offsets drying due to subsidence across a wide range of RH. Strong day-to-day moistening and drying takes place most frequently in relatively dry transition zones, where between 0.01% and 0.1% of Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission Precipitation Radar observations indicate active convection. Many of these strong moistening events in the tropics can be directly attributed to detrainment from recent tropical convection, while others in the subtropics appear to be related to stratosphere-troposphere exchange. The temporal and spatial limits of the convective source are estimated to be about 36–48 h and 600–1500 km, respectively, consistent with the lifetimes of detrainment cirrus clouds. Larger amounts of detrained ice are associated with enhanced upper tropospheric moistening in both absolute and relative terms. In particular, an increase in ice water content of approximately 400% corresponds to a 10–90% increase in the likelihood of moistening and a 30–50% increase in the magnitude of moistening.
url http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/9/5847/2009/acp-9-5847-2009.pdf
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