Pb. Russell et al., THE TROPICAL EXPERIMENT OF THE STRATOSPHERE-TROPOSPHERE EXCHANGE PROJECT (STEP) - SCIENCE OBJECTIVES, OPERATIONS, AND SUMMARY FINDINGS, JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 98(D5), 1993, pp. 8563-8589
The Stratosphere-Troposphere Exchange Project Tropical Experiment (STE
P Tropical) investigated stratosphere-troposphere exchange and dehydra
tion processes in that region and season with the coldest average trop
opause temperatures, the tropical western Pacific and northern Austral
ia during the winter monsoon (January-February) of 1987. This is also
a period of extensive convective activity and rainfall. In addition to
this primary goal, STEP Tropical (1) extended stratospheric aircraft
chemical tracer surveys to the southern hemisphere subtropics and mid-
latitudes and (2) sampled the anticyclone that dominates the circulati
on over Australia in the lower stratosphere during the winter monsoon.
Advanced fast-response instruments on NASA's ER-2 aircraft measured m
eteorological variables, stratospheric and tropospheric tracers, parti
cles, and radiative fluxes. ER-2 sorties included six ferry flight leg
s across the Pacific and eleven flights in the Australian region. The
1986-1987 monsoon was atypical in that (1) its date of onset, January
14, was 3 weeks later than normal and (2) it was unusually intense and
sustained once it did arrive, As a consequence, almost all the flight
s were conducted under monsoon conditions, with only limited sampling
of premonsoon and break-monsoon continental convection. Illustrations
show flight paths for each sortie on satellite images and on 100 hPa s
ynoptic flow charts, as well as the timing of flights with respect to
overall cloudiness in the Australian region. STEP Tropical results, re
ported in the accompanying set of papers, include (1) observational do
cumentation of a convective scale cold trap that dries air of recent t
ropospheric origin to prevailing stratospheric minimum water vapor mix
ing ratios (3 ppmv or less); (2) indications that this drying mechanis
m can be effective not only in the anvils of the tallest clouds (which
occur during ''break-monsoon'' conditions) but also in the anvils of
tropical cyclones and monsoon mesoscale convective systems; (3) demons
tration that convectively generated gravity waves account for a signif
icant part of the momentum forcing of the semiannual and quasi-biennia
l oscillations in the stratosphere; and (4) documentation of an upper
tropospheric source of NOy and a significant upward flux of NOy at the
tropical tropopause. For monsoon convection to be an important contri
butor to the net transfer of tropospheric air to the stratosphere, a m
echanism is required to move air from the cloud tops to significantly
greater heights. STEP Tropical results suggest that gravity-wave-induc
ed small-scale turbulence or radiative heating of anvils provides this
mechanism. Observational proof of the theoretically required high hea
ting rates remains to be obtained.