A Comparison of Different Metrics for Analyzing the Troposphere/Stratosphere Transitions Using High-Resolution Ozonesondes

In recent years, NOAA Earth System Research Laboratories (ESRL) have been launching very high quality and high resolution ozonesondes from eight sites across the globe: Antarctica; Greenland; American Samoa; Fiji; and several sites in USA (Alabama, California, Colorado and Hawai’i). These locations...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:ECAS 2022
Main Authors: Orla Dingley, Michael Connolly, Ronan Connolly, Willie Soon
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/ecas2022-12807
Description
Summary:In recent years, NOAA Earth System Research Laboratories (ESRL) have been launching very high quality and high resolution ozonesondes from eight sites across the globe: Antarctica; Greenland; American Samoa; Fiji; and several sites in USA (Alabama, California, Colorado and Hawai’i). These locations collectively cover the tropics, mid-latitudes and polar regions. The balloons provide in situ measurements approximately every second throughout their vertical ascent and descent in the troposphere, tropopause and stratosphere (up to ~30–35 km altitude). This unique high quality and publicly archived dataset allows direct inter-comparisons between various new and old techniques for analyzing the troposphere/stratosphere transitions that were not previously possible. With this in mind, we have analyzed one complete year (2016) of ozonesonde data from these eight locations in terms of several definitions of the tropopause. We find a surprising cohesiveness between many of the independent definitions of the tropopause that does not appear to have been properly recognized until now. These definitions appear to hold over all eight locations—from the tropics to the poles—for all seasons.