On the nature of large-scale mixing in the stratosphere and mesosphere

Theodore G. Shepherd, John N. Koshyk, Keith Ngan

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 22 - Publication in policy or professional journal

Abstract

Studies of tracer transport in the stratosphere have shown that adiabatic quasi-horizontal tracer evolution is controlled primarily by the large-scale low-frequency component of the flow. This behavior is consistent with the concept of chaotic advection, wherein the Eulerian velocity field is spatially coherent and temporally quasi-regular on timescales over which the Lagrangian evolution is chaotic. In this study, winds from a middle atmosphere general circulation model (the Canadian Middle Atmosphere Model) are used to compare and contrast the nature of tracer evolution in the stratosphere and mesosphere. It is found that the concept of chaotic advection is relevant in the stratosphere but not in the mesosphere. The explanation for this behavior is the increased strength of gravity wave activity in the mesosphere as compared with the stratosphere, which leads to shallower kinetic energy spectra on synoptic scales and a much shorter Eulerian correlation time. The shallower kinetic energy spectra imply that tracer evolution in the mesosphere is spectrally local, in contrast with the spectrally nonlocal regime that prevails in the stratosphere. This means that tracer advection calculations in the mesosphere are controlled primarily by the gravity wave spectrum and are intrinsically resolution dependent. Copyright 2000 by the American Geophysical Union.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2000JD900133
Pages (from-to)12433-12446
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres
Volume105
Issue numberD10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 May 2000
Externally publishedYes

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