The Stratosphere
The Stratosphere
The stratosphere sits on top of the troposphere, the lowest, densest layer of the
atmosphere. The boundary between the two, the tropopause, is about 18km above your
head, if you are in the tropics, and a few kilometres lower if you are at higher
latitudes (or up a mountain). The tropopause separates a rowdy below from a sedate
above. In the troposphere, the air at higher altitudes is in general cooler than
the air below it, an unstable situation in which warm and often moist air below is
endlessly buoying up into cooler air above. The resultant commotion creates clouds,
storms and much of the rest of the world’s weather. In the stratosphere, the air
gets warmer at higher altitudes, which provides stability
A little water manages to get past this cold trap. But as Dr Solomon and her
colleagues note, satellite measurements show that rather less has been doing so
over the past ten years than was the case previously. Plugging the changes in water
vapour into a climate model that looks at the way different substances absorb and
emit infrared radiation, they conclude that between 2000 and 2009 a drop in
stratospheric water vapour of less than one part per million slowed the rate of
warming at the Earth’s surface by about 25%.
Such a small change in stratospheric water vapour can have such a large effect
precisely because the stratosphere is already dry. It is the relative change in the
amount of a greenhouse gas, not its absolute level, which determines how much
warming it can produce, and this change was about 10% of the total.
By comparison with the greenhouse effect caused by increases in carbon dioxide, the
stratospheric drying is hardly massive. Dr Solomon and her colleagues peg the 2000-
2009 cooling effect at about a third of the opposite effect they would expect from
the carbon dioxide added over the same decade, and only a bit more than a twentieth
of the warming expected from the rise in carbon dioxide since the industrial
revolution. But it is surprising, nonetheless.
It is for the most part only in the tropics that tropospheric air can be drawn up
into the stratosphere; it is also in the tropics that one finds the most
spectacular thunderstorms, and these can reduce the temperature at the top of the
troposphere, deepening the cold trap that ascending water vapour must pass through
and thus impeding its rise. Over the past decade this stormy effect seems to have
been pronounced, with the coldest parts of the tropical troposphere getting about a
degree colder. But why this should be is not clear. Sea-surface temperatures, which
drive the big tropical storms, have been high, and during the past few years have
seemed to correlate with increased coldness aloft. At other times, though, they
have seemed to predict a wetter stratosphere.
Dr Solomon cannot say what is driving the change she and her colleagues have
studied, nor how long it will last. It may be one of many aspects of the climate
that flop around, seemingly at random, over periods of years to decades. Or it
might be something driven by a long-term change, such as the build-up of greenhouse
gases (or, conceivably, layers of sooty smog). Dr Solomon suspects the former,
because of the way the relationship between the stratosphere and the sea-surface
temperature has changed. Patterns of sea-surface temperature which come and go,
rather than absolute levels that continue to rise, may be the important thing.
That said, it is possible that the changes in the stratosphere are linked to the
effects humans are having on the atmosphere at large, and that the drying may
persist in providing a brake on warming. Or it may be, as others have suggested in
the past, that the long-term trend, as the troposphere warms up, will be to a
wetter, more warming lower stratosphere, too. Whether this is the case depends on
physical subtleties that are currently undecided, but it is not implausible. If it
were true, then the current drying would be more a blip than a trend.
A) What is the order of layers in the atmosphere, starting from the lowermost and
going to the topmost?
a) Tropopause, Troposphere, Mesosphere, Stratosphere.
b) Troposphere, Tropopause, Stratosphere, Mesosphere.
c) Troposphere, Tropopause, Mesosphere, Stratosphere. bbcd
d) Troposhere, Stratosphere, Tropopause, Mesosphere.
Solution: Option b
B) What is the passage has been cited as the main reason affecting global
temperatures?
a) Relative change in water vapour content in the Stratosphere.
b) Drop in Stratospheric water vapour of less than one part per million.
c) The extreme dropness in the Stratosphere.
d) Absorption and emission of infrared radiation by different substances.
Solution: Option b
Solution: Option d