Abstract

Abstract. A network of balloon-borne radiosonde observations employing chilled-mirror hygrometers for water and electrochemical concentration cells for ozone has been operated since the late 1990s in the Tropical Pacific to capture the evolution of dehydration of air parcels advected quasi-horizontally in the Tropical Tropopause Layer (TTL). The analysis of this dataset is made on isentropes taking advantage of the conservative properties of tracers moving adiabatically. The existence of ice particles is diagnosed by lidars simultaneously operated with sonde flights. Characteristics of the TTL dehydration are presented on the basis of individual soundings and statistical features. Supersaturations close to 80% in relative humidity with respect to ice (RHice) have been observed in subvisible cirrus clouds located near the cold point tropopause at extremely low temperatures around 180 K. Although further observational evidence is needed to confirm the credibility of such high values of RHice, the evolution of TTL dehydration is evident from the data in isentropic scatter plots between the sonde-observed mixing ratio (OMR) and the minimum saturation mixing ratio (SMRmin) along the back trajectories associated with the observed air mass. Supersaturation exceeding the critical value of homogeneous ice nucleation (OMR > 1.6 × SMRmin) is frequently observed on the 360 and 365 K surfaces indicating that cold trap dehydration is in progress in the TTL. The near correspondence between the two (OMR ~ SMRmin) at 380 K on the other hand implies that this surface is not sufficiently cold for the advected air parcels to be dehydrated. Above 380 K, cold trap dehydration would scarcely function while some moistening occurs before the air parcels reach the lowermost stratosphere at around 400 K where OMR is generally smaller than SMRmin.

Highlights

  • Balloon-borne radiosonde data obtained by chilled-mirror hygrometers and electrochemical concentration cell ozone sondes have been analysed for the study of cold-trap dehydration in the Tropical Tropopause Layer (TTL)

  • Statistical uncertainties are determined as well in the Lagrangian description of advected air masses by using a bundle of trajectories initialised in the region surrounding the ground station

  • The results are shown for individual soundings and using statistical features characterising the TTL dehydration

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Summary

Introduction

Too thin to be visually detected (often called subvisible cirrus clouds (SVCs); Jensen et al, 1996), are frequently observed even far from tropical convective systems (Winker and Trepte, 1998) suggesting that they are related to “cold trap” dehydration

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