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Weather from the Stratosphere?Is the stratosphere, the atmospheric layer between about 10 and 50 km, important for predicting changes in weather and climate? The traditional view is that the stratosphere is a passive recipient of energy and waves from weather systems in the underlying troposphere, but recent evidence suggests otherwise. At a workshop in Whistler, British Columbia (1), scientists met to discuss how the stratosphere responds to forcing from below, initiating feedback processes that in turn alter weather patterns in the troposphere. The lowest layer of the atmosphere, the troposphere, is highly dynamic and rich in water vapor, clouds, and weather. The stratosphere above it is less dense and less turbulent (see the figure). Variability in the stratosphere is dominated by hemispheric-scale changes in airflow on time scales of a week to several months. Occasionally, however, stratospheric air flow changes dramatically within just a day or two, with large-scale jumps in temperature of 20 K or more. The troposphere influences the stratosphere mainly through atmospheric waves that propagate upward. Recent evidence shows that the stratosphere organizes this chaotic wave forcing from below to create long-lived changes in the stratospheric circulation. These stratospheric changes can feed back to affect weather and climate in the troposphere.
Document ID
20060026077
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Baldwin, Mark P.
(NorthWest Research Associates, Inc. Bellevue, WA, United States)
Thompson, David W. J.
(Colorado State Univ. Fort Collins, CO, United States)
Shuckburgh, Emily F.
(Cambridge Univ. Cambridge, United Kingdom)
Norton, Warwick A.
(Oxford Univ. Oxford, United Kingdom)
Gillett, Nathan P.
(Victoria Univ. British Columbia, Canada)
Date Acquired
August 23, 2013
Publication Date
July 18, 2006
Publication Information
Publication: Science
Volume: 301
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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