Lagrangian simulations of the transport of young air masses to the top of the Asian monsoon anticyclone and into the tropical pipe
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Published:2019-05-08
Issue:9
Volume:19
Page:6007-6034
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Vogel Bärbel, Müller RolfORCID, Günther GebhardORCID, Spang ReinholdORCID, Hanumanthu SreeharshaORCID, Li DanORCID, Riese MartinORCID, Stiller Gabriele P.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. We have performed backward trajectory calculations and
simulations with the three-dimensional Chemical Lagrangian Model of the
Stratosphere (CLaMS) for two succeeding monsoon seasons using artificial
tracers of air mass origin. With these tracers we trace back the origin of
young air masses (age <6 months) at the top of the Asian monsoon
anticyclone and of air masses within the tropical pipe
(6 months < age <18 months) during summer 2008. The occurrence of
young air masses (<6 months) at the top of the Asian monsoon anticyclone up
to ∼460 K is in agreement with satellite
measurements of chlorodifluoromethane (HCFC-22) by the Michelson
Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) instrument. HCFC-22
can be considered as a regional tracer for continental eastern Asia and the
Middle East as it is mainly emitted in
this region. Our findings show that the transport of air masses from
boundary layer sources in the region of the Asian monsoon into the tropical
pipe occurs in three distinct steps. First, very fast uplift in “a
convective range” transports air masses up to 360 K potential
temperature within a few days. Second, air masses are uplifted from
about 360 K up to 460 K within “an upward spiralling range” within a
few months. The large-scale upward spiral extends from northern Africa
to the western Pacific. The air masses are transported upwards by
diabatic heating with a rate of up to 1–1.5 K per day, implying
strong vertical transport above the Asian monsoon anticyclone. Third,
transport of air masses occurs within the tropical pipe up to 550 K
associated with the large-scale Brewer–Dobson circulation within
∼1 year. In the upward spiralling range, air masses are uplifted by diabatic
heating across the (lapse rate) tropopause, which does not act as a
transport barrier, in contrast to the extratropical tropopause.
Further, in the upward spiralling range air masses from inside the
Asian monsoon anticyclone are mixed with air masses convectively
uplifted outside the core of the Asian monsoon anticyclone in the
tropical adjacent regions. Moreover, the vertical transport of air
masses from the Asian monsoon anticyclone into the tropical pipe is
weak in terms of transported air masses compared to the transport from
the monsoon anticyclone into the northern extratropical lower
stratosphere. Air masses from the Asian monsoon anticyclone
(India/China) contribute a minor fraction to the composition of air
within the tropical pipe at 550 K (6 %), and the major fractions are
from Southeast Asia (16 %) and the tropical Pacific (15 %).
Funder
European Commission
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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