The evolution of the dehydration in the Antarctic stratospheric vortex
H. Vömel
Department of Physics; University of Colorado, Boulder
S. J. Oltmans, D. J. Hofmann
Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory, NOAA, Boulder, Colorado
T. Deshler
Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Wyoming, Laramie
J. M. Rosen
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Wyoming, Laramie
Abstract. In 1994 an intensive program of balloon-borne
frost point measurements was performed at McMurdo, Antarctica. During this
program a total of 19 frost point soundings was obtained between February
7 and October 5, which cover a wide range of undisturbed through strongly
dehydrated situations. Together with several soundings from South Pole
station between 1990 and 1994, they give a comprehensive picture of the
general development of the dehydration in the Antarctic stratospheric vortex.
The period of dehydration typically starts around the middle of June, and
a rapid formation of large particles leads to a fast dehydration of the
vortex. The evaporation of falling particles leads to rehydration layers,
which have significantly higher water vapor concentrations than the undisturbed
stratosphere. Through the formation of these rehydration layers in the
early stages of the dehydration we can estimate a particle fall speed of
1/3 km/d and thus a mean particle size of 4 mm. Ice saturation was observed
over McMurdo in only two cases and only well after the onset of the dehydration.
From the inspection of synoptic maps it then follows that a small cold
region inside the vortex seems to be sufficient to dehydrate the entire
vortex. Above 20 km the dehydration is completed by the end of July. From
the descent of the upper dehydration edge we can estimate a mean descent
rate inside the vortex of 1.5 km/month. In McMurdo we observed occasional
penetration of the vortex edge in cases where the vortex edge was close
to McMurdo, however, these cases seem to have little effect on the bulk
of the vortex. A sounding from November 3, 1990, at South Pole shows that
the dehydration may persist into November and indicates that there is no
significant transport into the vortex throughout winter and early spring.