The role of monsoon convection in the dehydration of the lower tropical stratosphere

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Abstract

Observations by radiosondes, satellites, and aircraft have shown that a minimum in water vapor mixing ratio in the lower tropical stratosphere (typically around 19-km altitude) is a climatological feature of the global water vapor distribution. The processes responsible for the formation and maintenance of this minimum are examined with the aid of a mesoscale dynamical model of tropical convection that includes bulk ice microphysics, radiative transfer, and surface processes. It is concluded that thin cirrus clouds produced by buoyancy waves may contribute significantly to the formation and maintenance of the observed water vapor minimum in the lower tropical stratosphere. -Authors

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Potter, B. E., & Holton, J. R. (1995). The role of monsoon convection in the dehydration of the lower tropical stratosphere. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 52(8), 1034–1050. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1995)052<1034:TROMCI>2.0.CO;2

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