Search results for "Tropopause"

showing 2 items of 82 documents

Transport of Antarctic stratospheric strongly dehydrated air into the troposphere observed during the HALO-ESMVal campaign 2012

2015

Abstract. Dehydration in the Antarctic winter stratosphere is a well-known phenomenon that is annually observed by satellites and occasionally observed by balloon-borne measurements. However, in situ measurements of dehydrated air masses in the Antarctic vortex are very rare. Here, we present detailed observations with the in situ and GLORIA remote sensing instrument payload aboard the German aircraft HALO. Strongly dehydrated air masses down to 1.6 ppmv of water vapor were observed as far north as 47° S in an altitude between 12 and 13 km in the lowermost stratosphere. The dehydration can be traced back to individual ice formation events above the Antarctic Peninsula and Plateau, where ice…

polar vortexAtmospheric ScienceRossby waveAtmosphärische SpurenstoffedehydrationAtmospheric scienceslcsh:QC1-999Tropospherelcsh:ChemistryEarth scienceslcsh:QD1-999Potential vorticityMiddle latitudesClimatologyddc:550Environmental scienceAntarcticTropopauseStratosphereWater vaporAir masslcsh:PhysicsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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In situ measurements of background aerosol and subvisible cirrus in the tropical tropopause region

2002

[1] In situ aerosol measurements were performed in the Indian Ocean Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) region during the Airborne Polar Experiment-Third European Stratospheric Experiment on Ozone (APE-THESEO) field campaign based in Mahe, Seychelles between 24 February and 6 March 1999. These are measurements of particle size distributions with a laser optical particle counter of the Forward Scattering Spectrometer Probe (FSSP)-300 type operated on the Russian M-55 high-altitude research aircraft Geophysica in the tropical upper troposphere and lower stratosphere up to altitudes of 21 km. On 24 and 27 February 1999, ultrathin layers of cirrus clouds were penetrated by Geophysica directly…

subvisualAtmospheric ScienceParticle numberMeteorologyaerosolsubvisible cirrusSoil SciencecirrusAquatic ScienceOceanographyAtmospheric sciencestropicsTroposphereGeochemistry and Petrologytropopauseddc:550Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)StratosphereEarth-Surface ProcessesWater Science and TechnologyEcologybackgroundPaleontologyForestryJAerosolGeophysicsLidarSpace and Planetary ScienceEnvironmental scienceCirrusTropopauseParticle counterJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
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