Abstract

Abstract. A merged time series of stratospheric water vapour built from the Halogen Occultation Instrument (HALOE) and the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) data between 60° S and 60° N and 15 to 30 km and covering the years 1992 to 2012 was analysed by multivariate linear regression, including an 11-year solar cycle proxy. Lower stratospheric water vapour was found to reveal a phase-shifted anti-correlation with the solar cycle, with lowest water vapour after solar maximum. The phase shift is composed of an inherent constant time lag of about 2 years and a second component following the stratospheric age of air. The amplitudes of the water vapour response are largest close to the tropical tropopause (up to 0.35 ppmv) and decrease with altitude and latitude. Including the solar cycle proxy in the regression results in linear trends of water vapour being negative over the full altitude/latitude range, while without the solar proxy, positive water vapour trends in the lower stratosphere were found. We conclude from these results that a solar signal seems to be generated at the tropical tropopause which is most likely imprinted on the stratospheric water vapour abundances and transported to higher altitudes and latitudes via the Brewer–Dobson circulation. Hence it is concluded that the tropical tropopause temperature at the final dehydration point of air may also be governed to some degree by the solar cycle. The negative water vapour trends obtained when considering the solar cycle impact on water vapour abundances can possibly solve the "water vapour conundrum" of increasing stratospheric water vapour abundances despite constant or even decreasing tropopause temperatures.

Highlights

  • Water vapour is one of the Earth’s most important greenhouse gases, having the strongest long-wave radiative forcing effect on the atmosphere (Kiehl and Trenberth, 1997)

  • The analysis of the merged Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS)–Halogen Occultation Instrument (HALOE) time series by multivariate linear regression, including a solar cycle proxy as described above, suggests that a solar signal is imprinted on the water vapour abundance entering the stratosphere at the tropical tropopause, and this signal is transported to the middle stratosphere via the Brewer–Dobson circulation

  • A parametric fit of a 20-year time series of lower stratospheric water vapour based on a merged MIPAS–HALOE data set is improved by inclusion of a solar cycle term

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Summary

Introduction

Water vapour is one of the Earth’s most important greenhouse gases, having the strongest long-wave radiative forcing effect on the atmosphere (Kiehl and Trenberth, 1997). An increase of water vapour in the lower stratosphere leads to a warmer troposphere, further affecting global surface temperatures (Manabe and Strickler, 1964; Solomon et al, 2010). Near the tropical tropopause, strongly influence surface climate (Riese et al, 2012), and increasing stratospheric concentrations intensify ozone loss in this atmospheric region (Stenke and Grewe, 2005). For these reasons it is of major importance to understand its trends and fluctuations on a global scale.

The empirical basis
The harmonized H2O record
Pinatubo
Altitude resolution
De-biasing
Regression analysis
The standard regression
Consideration of the solar cycle
Implication for the linear trends and other regression parameters
Findings
Discussion
Conclusions
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