Stratospheric Hydration Processes in Tropopause‐Overshooting Convection Revealed by Tracer‐Tracer Correlations From the DCOTSS Field Campaign

Author:

Homeyer Cameron R.1ORCID,Gordon Andrea E.1ORCID,Smith Jessica B.2,Ueyama Rei3ORCID,Wilmouth David M.2ORCID,Sayres David S.2ORCID,Hare Jennifer2ORCID,Pandey Apoorva245,Hanisco Thomas F.5ORCID,Dean‐Day Jonathan M.6ORCID,Hannun Reem3ORCID,St. Clair Jason M.57

Affiliation:

1. School of Meteorology University of Oklahoma Norman OK USA

2. Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Harvard University Cambridge MA USA

3. NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field CA USA

4. Now at University of Maryland Baltimore County Baltimore MD USA

5. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt MD USA

6. Bay Area Environmental Research Institute Moffett Field CA USA

7. University of Maryland Baltimore County Baltimore MD USA

Abstract

AbstractHydration of the stratosphere by tropopause‐overshooting convection has received increasing interest due to the extreme concentrations of water vapor that can result and, ultimately, the climate warming potential such hydration provides. Previous work has recognized the importance of numerous dynamic and physical processes that control stratospheric water vapor delivery by convection. This study leverages recent comprehensive observations from the NASA Dynamics and Chemistry of the Summer Stratosphere (DCOTSS) field campaign to determine the frequency at which each process operates during real events. Specifically, a well‐established analysis technique known as tracer‐tracer correlation is applied to DCOTSS observations of ozone, water vapor, and potential temperature to identify the occurrence of known processes. It is found that approximately half of convectively‐driven stratospheric hydration samples show no indication of significant air mass transport and mixing, emphasizing the importance of ice sublimation to stratospheric water vapor delivery. Furthermore, the temperature of the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere environment and/or overshoot appears to be a commonly active constraint, since the approximate maximum possible water vapor concentration that can be reached in an air mass is limited to the saturation mixing ratio when ice is present. Finally, little evidence of relationships between dynamic and physical processes and their spatial distribution was found, implying that stratospheric water vapor delivery by convection is likely facilitated by a complex collection of processes in each overshooting event.

Funder

Ames Research Center

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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