Abstract

Abstract. The Asian monsoon region is the most prominent moisture center of water vapor in the lower stratosphere (LS) during boreal summer. Previous studies have suggested that the transport of water vapor to the Asian monsoon LS is controlled by dehydration temperatures and convection mainly over the Bay of Bengal and Southeast Asia. However, there is a clear geographic variation of convection associated with the seasonal and intra-seasonal variations of the Asian monsoon circulation, and the relative influence of such a geographic variation of convection vs. the variation of local dehydration temperatures on water vapor transport is still not clear. Using satellite observations from the Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) and a domain-filling forward trajectory model, we show that almost half of the seasonal water vapor increase in the Asian monsoon LS are attributable to geographic variations of convection and resultant variations of the dehydration center, of which the influence is comparable to the influence of the local dehydration temperature increase. In particular, dehydration temperatures are coldest over the southeast and warmest over the northwest Asian monsoon region. Although the convective center is located over Southeast Asia, an anomalous increase of convection over the northwest Asia monsoon region increases local diabatic heating in the tropopause layer and air masses entering the LS are dehydrated at relatively warmer temperatures. Due to warmer dehydration temperatures, anomalously moist air enters the LS and moves eastward along the northern flank of the monsoon anticyclonic flow, leading to wet anomalies in the LS over the Asian monsoon region. Likewise, when convection increases over the Southeast Asia monsoon region, dry anomalies appear in the LS. On a seasonal scale, this feature is associated with the monsoon circulation, convection and diabatic heating marching towards the northwest Asia monsoon region from June to August. The march of convection leads to an increasing fraction of the air mass to be dehydrated at warmer temperatures over the northwest Asia monsoon region. Work presented here confirms the dominant role of temperatures on water vapor variations and emphasizes that further studies should take geographic variations of the dehydration center into consideration when studying water vapor variations in the LS as it is linked to changes of convection and large-scale circulation patterns.

Highlights

  • Water vapor variation in the lower stratosphere (LS) contributes significantly to global climate change through altering the radiation budget (Forster et al, 1999; Solomon et al, 2010; Dessler et al, 2013) and chemical processes, ozone depletion (Evans et al, 1998; Dvortsov and Solomon, 2001; Shindell, 2001; Stenke and Grewe, 2005; Anderson et al, 2012)

  • There is an isolated moisture center observed in the LS over the Asian monsoon region (Rosenlof et al, 1997; Randel et al, 2001; Dessler and Sherwood, 2004; Milz et al, 2005; Park et al, 2007; Randel et al, 2015), primarily at 100 and 82 hPa but weakened at higher levels based on the Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) observations

  • This paper clarifies that the changes of dehydration locations – in addition to the changes of local dehydration temperatures – have significant influence on water vapor transport to the LS through a joint analysis of satellite data and trajectory model simulations

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Summary

Introduction

Water vapor variation in the lower stratosphere (LS) contributes significantly to global climate change through altering the radiation budget (Forster et al, 1999; Solomon et al, 2010; Dessler et al, 2013) and chemical processes, ozone depletion (Evans et al, 1998; Dvortsov and Solomon, 2001; Shindell, 2001; Stenke and Grewe, 2005; Anderson et al, 2012). Water vapor in the LS exhibits a localized maximum over the Asian monsoon region from May to September (Rosenlof et al, 1997; Randel et al, 2001; Dessler and Sherwood, 2004; Milz et al, 2005; Park et al, 2007; Randel et al, 2015). This center of maximum water vapor is an important moisture source for the global strato-.

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