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Title: Tropical tropospheric water vapor budget, maintenance of the lapse rate, and distribution of the extratropical tropospheric temperature and wind

Miscellaneous ·
OSTI ID:6967235

Utilizing observational data and conceptual models, the author examined the tropical tropospheric water vapor budget and the maintenance of the lapse rate. In light of the mountain-snow line record for the last glaciation, the nature of water vapor feedback in climate change was investigated. The chief finding is that water vapor in the tropical free troposphere may play a stabilizing role in climate change through a coupling with the tropospheric lapse rate. The author formulated a model for the vertical distribution of tropical tropospheric temperature. The radiative-convective equilibrium profiles predicted by the model successfully depict the observed characteristics. The author then examined the tropical tropospheric water vapor budget. It was found that the evaporation of the hydrometeors pumped into the upper troposphere by deep convective towers appears to be the major moisturizer for the large-scale subsiding flow. The role of water vapor and lapse rate in different climate regimes was examined in light of the mountain-snow line record for the last glaciation. Together with CLIMAP data for the surface temperature estimate, the mountain snowline record suggests that the mean lapse rate in the low tropical troposphere during the last glaciation was about 20% larger than at present. Using the model for the tropical tropospheric temperature, the dependence of the lapse rate on the relative humidity in the middle and upper troposphere was studied. The author found that for a fixed meridional distribution of surface temperature and a tropical lapse rate which are the same as the observed, the extratropical troposphere with constant PV along isentropic surfaces has a considerably colder upper troposphere near the jet and a stronger jet than the observed. The mutual dependence between temperature, wind and PV was examined. The sensitivity of the temperature and wind distribution of the PV gradient along isentropic surfaces is also examined.

Research Organization:
Massachusetts Inst. of Tech., Cambridge, MA (United States)
OSTI ID:
6967235
Resource Relation:
Other Information: Thesis (Ph.D.)
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English