Global tropopause height trends estimated from GPS radio occultation data

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Abstract

This study discusses global tropopause height variabilities and trends based on zonal monthly mean GPS radio occultation data from the German CRAMP satellite mission for the period May 2001-December 2007 (80 months). A data gap of missing CHAMP data in July 2006 was filled with radio occultation data of the US-German GRACE mission. A global increase of the tropopause height between 26-44 m during the observation period (4-7 m/yr) is found depending on the binning method (5° or 10° latitude bands) and the used tropopause detection algorithm. The corresponding trend errors vary between 19-21 m. The inclusion of the quasi-biennial oscillation in the regression model leads to a global increase of the tropopause height from 1-5 m (2-12%) during the time period depending on the binning method. Global tropopause height variations are positively correlated with upper tropospheric (500-100 hPa) and anti-correlated with lower stratospheric (100-30 hPa) temperature variations. Copyright 2008 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Schmidt, T., Wickert, J., Beyerle, G., & Heise, S. (2008). Global tropopause height trends estimated from GPS radio occultation data. Geophysical Research Letters, 35(11). https://doi.org/10.1029/2008GL034012

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