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SCIENCE
INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Atmospheric Sciences
Frigid South Pole
atmosphere reveals flaw in global circulation models
Jim
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073;kloeppel@uiuc.edu
8/28/02
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. Atmospheric
measurements made at Earth's geographic poles provide a convenient way
of validating and calibrating global circulation models. Such measurements
also might provide some of the first conclusive evidence of global change
in the middle and upper atmospheres. But new data shows that the current
models are wrong: Temperatures over the South Pole are much colder in
winter than scientists had anticipated.
As reported in the Aug. 28 issue of Geophysical Research Letters, scientists
have found that temperatures during mid-winter in the stratopause and
mesopause regions at the South Pole are about 40-50 degrees Fahrenheit
colder than model predictions.
The work was performed by Chester Gardner, a professor of electrical
and computer engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign;
Weilin Pan, a doctoral student at Illinois; and Ray Roble, a senior
scientist at the High Altitude Observatory of the National Center for
Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo.
"Our results suggest that wintertime warming due to sinking air
masses is not as strong as the models have assumed," Gardner said.
"But, in all fairness, since no one had made these measurements
before, modelers have been forced to estimate the values. And, in this
case, their estimates were wrong."
Gardners group was the first to make upper atmosphere temperature
measurements over the South Pole. From December 1999 until October 2001,
the scientists operated a laser radar (lidar) system at the Amundsen-Scott
South Pole Station. By combining the lidar data with balloon measurements
of the troposphere and lower stratosphere, the scientists recorded temperatures
from the surface to an altitude of about 70 miles.
"After the autumnal equinox in March, radiative processes begin
cooling the polar atmosphere," Gardner said. "During the long
polar night, the atmosphere above Antarctica receives little sunlight
and is sealed off by a vortex of winds that spins counterclockwise.
This stable polar vortex prevents the transport of warmer air from lower
latitudes into the pole, and leads to extreme cooling of the lower stratosphere."
In May, June and July, the stratopause region near 30 miles altitude
was considerably colder than model predictions, Gardner said. "The
greatest difference occurred in July, when the measured stratopause
temperature was about 0 degrees Fahrenheit, compared to about 40 degrees
Fahrenheit predicted by the models."
With no sunlight to warm the polar atmosphere, the only source of heat
in the wintertime is the adiabatic compression of down welling air masses.
This heating effect partially offsets the effects of radiative cooling
of greenhouse gases particularly carbon dioxide in the
middle and upper atmospheres.
"Current global circulation models apparently overpredict the amount
of down-welling, because they show warmer temperatures than we observed,"
Gardner said.
To test this hypothesis, the researchers reduced the amount of down-welling
over the polar cap using the NCAR Thermosphere-Ionosphere-Mesosphere-Electrodynamics
General Circulation Model. Developed by Roble and his colleagues, it
is the latest in a series of sophisticated three-dimensional, time-dependent
models that simulate the circulation, temperature, and compositional
structure of the upper atmosphere and ionosphere.
"With the reduced down-welling, the predicted mesopause temperature
near 60 miles altitude decreased from about minus 120 degrees Fahrenheit
to about minus 140 degrees Fahrenheit, in better agreement with our
measurements for mid-winter conditions," Gardner said. "In
the stratopause region, the predicted temperature decreased from about
35 degrees Fahrenheit to about 12 degrees Fahrenheit, also in better
agreement with our measurements."
The recent measurements establish a baseline for polar temperatures,
which can then be compared against future changes as greenhouse gases
continue to accumulate, Gardner said. "The measurements also show
that we have a flaw in some of our global atmospheric circulation models.
Now we can go back and improve those models to better predict the temperatures
in the middle and upper atmospheres throughout both hemispheres."
The National Science Foundation funded the work.
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