The diurnal cycle of the clouds extending above the tropical tropopause observed by spaceborne lidar
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Published:2020-04-01
Issue:6
Volume:20
Page:3921-3929
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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:
Dauhut ThibautORCID, Noel VincentORCID, Dion Iris-Amata
Abstract
Abstract. The presence of clouds above the tropopause over tropical convection centers
has so far been documented by spaceborne instruments that are either
sun-synchronous or insensitive to thin cloud layers. Here we document, for
the first time through direct observation by spaceborne lidar, how the
tropical cloud fraction evolves above the tropopause throughout the day.
After confirming previous studies that found such clouds most frequently
above convection centers, we show that stratospheric clouds and their
vertical extent above the tropopause follow a diurnal rhythm linked to
convective activity. The diurnal cycle of the stratospheric clouds displays
two maxima: one in the early night (19:00–20:00 LT) and a later one (00:00–01:00 LT).
Stratospheric clouds extend up to 0.5–1 km above the tropopause during
nighttime, when they are the most frequent. The frequency and the vertical
extent of stratospheric clouds is very limited during daytime, and when
present they are found very close to the tropopause. Results are similar
over the major convection centers (Africa, South America and the Warm Pool), with
more clouds above land in DJF (December–January–February) and less above the ocean and in JJA (June–July–August).
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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