Production of dry air by isentropic mixing

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Abstract

The authors have explored the factors governing upper-tropospheric relative humidity with a simple model based on isentropic mixing and condensation. In the absence of moisture resupply, about half of the mass of water is lost from the isentropic surface after only 10 days, with the main brake on drying being the weak mixing between Tropics and extratropics. The moist plumes escaping from the Tropics take the form of filamentary structures, which are more numerous and space filling in the summer/Southern Hemisphere than in the winter/Northern Hemisphere. These moist plumes are accompanied by substantial importation of extratropical dry air into the Tropics. The probability distributions of midlatitude relative humidity are bimodal, with a prominent dry peak having a lognormal tail and a spike representing saturated air; the summer hemisphere has generally higher relative humidity than the winter hemisphere. When moisture is maintained by periodically resaturating the Tropics, the resulting cloud and moisture fields exhibit a fractal character. -from Authors

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Yang, H., & Pierrehumbert, R. T. (1994). Production of dry air by isentropic mixing. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 51(23), 3437–3454. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1994)051<3437:PODABI>2.0.CO;2

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