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On the motion of air through the stratospheric polar vortexTrajectory calculations using horizontal winds from the U.K. Meteorological Office data assimilation system and vertical velocities from a radiation calculation are used to simulate the three-dimensional motion of air through the stratospheric polar vortex for Northern Hemisphere (NH) and Southern Hemisphere (SH) winters since the launch of the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS). Throughout the winter, air from the upper stratosphere moves poleward and descends into the middle stratosphere. In the SH lower to middle stratosphere, strongest descent occurs near the edge of the polar vortex, with that edge defined by mixing characteristics. The NH shows a similar pattern in late winter, but in early winter strongest descent is near the center of the vortex, except when wave activity is particularly strong. Strong barriers to latitudinal mixing exist above about 420 K throughout the winter. Below this, the polar night jet is weak in early winter, so air descending below that level mixes between polar and middle latitudes. In late winter, parcels descend less and the polar night jet moves downward, so there is less latitudinal mixing. The degree of mixing in the lower stratosphere thus depends strongly on the position and evolution of the polar night jet and on the amount of descent experienced by the air parcels; these characteristics show considerable interannual variability in both hemispheres. The computed trajectories provide a three-dimensional picture of air motion during the final warming. Large tongues of air are drawn off the vortex and stretched into increasingly long and narrow tongues extending into low latitudes. This vortex erosion process proceeds more rapidly in the NH than in he SH. In the lower stratosphere, the majority of air parcels remain confined within a lingering region of strong potential vorticity gradients into December in the SH and April in the NH, well after the vortex breaks up in the midstratosphere.
Document ID
19950036038
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Manney, G. L.
(Jet Propulsion Lab. Cal. Inst. of Technology, Pasadena, CA, United States)
Zurek, R. W.
(Jet Propulsion Lab. Cal. Inst. of Technology, Pasadena, CA, United States)
O'Neill, A.
(Centre for Global Atmospheric Modelling Reading, United Kingdom)
Swinbank, R.
(Meteorological Office Bracknell, United Kingdom)
Date Acquired
August 16, 2013
Publication Date
October 15, 1994
Publication Information
Publication: Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
Volume: 51
Issue: 20
ISSN: 0022-4928
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Accession Number
95A67637
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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