Impact of typhoons on the composition of the upper troposphere within the Asian summer monsoon anticyclone: The SWOP campaign in Lhasa 2013

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Abstract

In the frame of the SWOP (sounding water vapour, ozone, and particle) campaign during the Asian summer monsoon (ASM), ozone and water vapour profiles were measured by balloon-borne sensors launched from Lhasa (29.66°N, 91.14°E, elevation 3650m), China, in August 2013. In total, 24 soundings were launched, nearly half of which show strong variations in the relationship between ozone and water vapour in the tracer-tracer correlation in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS). For each sounding, 20-day backward trajectories were calculated using the trajectory module of the Chemical Lagrangian Model of the Stratosphere (CLaMS) to analyse these variations. The trajectory calculations demonstrate that three tropical cyclones (tropical storm Jebi, typhoons Utor and Trami), which occurred over the western Pacific Ocean during August 2013, had a considerable impact on the vertical distribution of ozone and water vapour by uplifting marine air masses to altitudes of the ASM anticyclone. Air parcels subsequently arrived at the observation site via two primary pathways: firstly via direct horizontal transport from the location of the typhoon to the station within approximately 3 days, and secondly via transport following the clockwise wind flow of the ASM within a timescale of 1 week. Furthermore, the interplay between the spatial position of the ASM anticyclone and tropical cyclones plays a key role in controlling the transport pathways of air parcels from the boundary layer of the western Pacific to Lhasa in horizontal and vertical transport. Moreover, the statistical analysis shows that the strongest impact by typhoons is found at altitudes between 14.5 and 17km (365-375K). Low ozone values (50-80ppbv) were observed between 370 and 380K due to the strong vertical transport within tropical cyclones.

Figures

  • Table 1. Flight statics for balloon launches during the August 2013 SWOP campaign in Lhasa.
  • Figure 1. H2O–O3 correlations for balloon profiles measured over Lhasa in August 2013 (grey colour). The profiles measured on 11– 12 August were impacted by tropical storm Jebi and measurements on 19 and 23–25 August were impacted by typhoon Utor or Trami. The layers of three profiles influenced by tropical cyclones are highlighted (inset).
  • Table 2. Classification of tropical cyclones Jebi, Utor, and Trami in 2013.
  • Figure 2. Pathways of tropical cyclones (a) Trami, (b) Jebi, and (c) Utor are marked as green dots for every 6 h. The number printed inside the large green dots indicates the day in August 2013, except 29 and 31 in (b), which refer to 29 and 31 July. The blue points denote the average geographical position where air parcels experienced strong uplift within tropical cyclones. The red star marks the location of Lhasa.
  • Figure 3. The 20-day backward trajectories started along measured balloon profiles of target parcels on 24 (a, c), 11 (d, f), and 19 (g, i) August 2013. Backward trajectories influenced by tropical cyclones Trami, Jebi, and Utor are shown colour-coded by temperature (left). The vertical profiles of ozone (blue line), water vapour (black line), and the mean of ozone profiles in August 2013 (grey line) are also shown (middle). The geographical position (latitude, longitude, and altitude) of the 20-day backward trajectories is given (right) colourcoded by days observed from measurement. The vertical line marks the location of the Lhasa site. The grey lines in the maps show the longitude–latitude projection of the trajectories.
  • Figure 4. The same format as Fig. 3 (left), but potential vorticity (1 PVU= 106 K m2 kg−1 s−1) is shown along 20-day backward trajectories for observations impacted by (a) Trami, (b) Jebi, and (c) Utor.
  • Figure 5. The geopotential height at 100 hPa pressure level (blue contour lines, > 16.72 km) and sea-level air pressure (shade, hPa) of Trami at (a) 06:00 UTC 20 August, (b) 18:00 UTC 21 August, and (c) 00:00 UTC 23 August. The asterisks, colour-coded by potential temperature, mark the geographical positions of target parcels. The red star marks the location of Lhasa.
  • Figure 6. The same format as Fig. 5, but for Jebi. Here the geopotential height is shown at 150 hPa pressure level.

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APA

Li, D., Vogel, B., Bian, J., Müller, R., Pan, L. L., Günther, G., … Vömel, H. (2017). Impact of typhoons on the composition of the upper troposphere within the Asian summer monsoon anticyclone: The SWOP campaign in Lhasa 2013. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 17(7), 4657–4672. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-4657-2017

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