Stratospheric adiabatic mixing rates derived from the vertical gradient
of age of air
Abstract
The circulation of the stratosphere transports important trace gases,
including ozone, and can be thought of as having a fast horizontal
mixing component and a slow meridional overturning component. Measuring
the strength of the circulation directly is not possible, and so it must
be inferred from tracer measurements. Long-lived trace gases can be
related to the idealized tracer age of air, which describes how long an
air parcel has been in the stratosphere. In this paper, we derive a
quantitative relationship between the vertical gradient of age and the
horizontal mixing between the tropics and the extratropics using a
“leaky pipe” framework in isentropic coordinates. Mixing rates of air
into and out of the tropics are related to the vertical gradient of age
in the tropics and in the extratropics, respectively. The derivation is
repeated with the hemispheres separated so that the vertical structure
of the mixing in the two hemispheres can be compared directly. These
theories are applied to output from an idealized model of the
stratosphere and from a realistic chemistry-climate model to test our
assumptions and calculate the mixing rates in the models. We then
perform a quantitative comparison of the mixing rates in the Northern
and Southern hemisphere along with an examination of where such a
separation is valid. Finally, we perform a very preliminary calculation
of mixing efficiency with satellite data to demonstrate the use of the
mixing metric to compare mixing models and data.