EOS Microwave Limb Sounder observations of ‘‘frozen-in’’ anticyclonic air in Arctic summer

A previously unreported phenomenon, a ‘‘frozen-in’’ anticyclone (FrIAC) after the 2005 Arctic spring vortex breakup, was discovered in Earth Observing System (EOS) Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) long-lived trace gas data. A tongue of low-latitude (high-N2O, low-H2O) air was drawn into high latitudes a...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical Research Letters
Main Authors: Manney, G. L., Livesey, N. J., Jimenez, C. J., Pumphrey, H. C., Santee, M. L., MacKenzie, I. A., Waters, J. W.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The American Geophysical Union 2007
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2014/40361
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Summary:A previously unreported phenomenon, a ‘‘frozen-in’’ anticyclone (FrIAC) after the 2005 Arctic spring vortex breakup, was discovered in Earth Observing System (EOS) Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) long-lived trace gas data. A tongue of low-latitude (high-N2O, low-H2O) air was drawn into high latitudes and confined in a tight anticyclone, then advected intact in the summer easterlies through late August. A similar feature in O3 disappeared by early April as a result of chemical processes. The FrIAC was initially advected upright at nearly the same speed at all levels from ~660 to 1300 K (~25–45 km); increasing vertical wind shear after early June tilted the FrIAC and weakened it at higher levels. The associated feature in PV disappeared by early June; transport calculations fail to reproduce the remarkable persistence of the FrIAC, suggesting deficiencies in summer high-latitude winds. The historical PV record suggests that this phenomenon may have occurred several times before. The lack of a persistent signature in O3 or PV, along with its small size and rapid motion, make it unlikely that a FrIAC could have been reliably identified without hemispheric daily longlived trace gas profiles such as those from EOS MLS. NASA/JPL