TY - THES
AU - Hanumanthu, Sreeharsha
TI - Trajectory Analysis on the Asian Tropopause Aerosol Layer (ATAL) based on Balloon Measurements at the Foothills of the Himalayas
VL - 552
PB - Universität Wuppertal
VL - Dissertation
CY - Jülich
M1 - FZJ-2021-05442
SN - 978-3-95806-578-9
T2 - Schriften des Forschungszentrums Jülich. Reihe Energie & Umwelt / Energy & Environment
SP - xiv, 147 S.
PY - 2021
N1 - Universität Wuppertal, Diss., 2021
AB - The South Asian summer monsoon is associated with a large-scale anticyclonic circulation in the Upper Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere, which confines the air mass inside. During boreal summer, the confinement of this air mass leads to an accumulation of aerosol between about 13 km and 18 km (360 K and 440 K potential temperature), this accumulation of aerosol constitutes the Asian Tropopause Aerosol Layer (ATAL). In this thesis balloon-borne aerosol back-scatter measurements of the ATAL are presented by the Compact Optical Backscatter Aerosol Detector (COBALD) instrument in Nainital in Northern India in August 2016, and in the post-monsoon time in November 2016. The presence of an ATAL is then detected by the enhancement of the August measurements compared to the November measurements. The measurements demonstrate a strong variability of the ATAL’s altitude, vertical extent, aerosol backscatter intensity and cirrus cloud occurrence frequency. Such a variability cannot be deduced from climatological means of the ATAL as they are derived from satellite measurements. To explain this observed variability a Lagrangian back-trajectory analysis was performed using the Chemical Lagrangian Model of the Stratosphere(CLaMS). We identify the transport pathways of air parcels contributing to the ATAL over Nainital in August 2016, as well as the source regions of the air masses contributingto the composition of the ATAL. The analysis reveals a variety of factors contributing to the observed day-to-day variability of the ATAL: continental convection, tropical cyclones (maritime convection), dynamics of the anticyclone and stratospheric intrusions. Thus, the ATAL is a mixture of air masses coming from different atmospheric height layers. In addition, contributions from the model boundary layer originate in different geographic source regions. The location of strongest updraft along the backward trajectories reveal a cluster of strong upward transport at the southern edge of the Himalayan foothills. From the top of the convective outflow level (about 13 km; 360 K) the air parcels ascend slowly to ATAL altitudes within a large-scale upward spiral driven by the diabatic heating in the anticyclonic flow ofthe South Asian summer monsoon at UTLS altitudes. [...]
LB - PUB:(DE-HGF)3 ; PUB:(DE-HGF)11
UR - https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/903809
ER -