Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part A Principles
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Atmospheric transport and transport models
- Chapter 3 Estimation
- Chapter 4 Time-series estimation
- Chapter 5 Observations of atmospheric composition
- Chapter 6 The sources and sinks
- Chapter 7 Problem formulation
- Chapter 8 Ill-conditioning
- Chapter 9 Analysis of model error
- Chapter 10 Green's functions and synthesis inversion
- Chapter 11 Time-stepping inversions
- Chapter 12 Non-linear inversion techniques
- Chapter 13 Experimental design
- Part B Recent applications
- Appendices
- Solutions to exercises
- References
- Index
Chapter 2 - Atmospheric transport and transport models
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part A Principles
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Atmospheric transport and transport models
- Chapter 3 Estimation
- Chapter 4 Time-series estimation
- Chapter 5 Observations of atmospheric composition
- Chapter 6 The sources and sinks
- Chapter 7 Problem formulation
- Chapter 8 Ill-conditioning
- Chapter 9 Analysis of model error
- Chapter 10 Green's functions and synthesis inversion
- Chapter 11 Time-stepping inversions
- Chapter 12 Non-linear inversion techniques
- Chapter 13 Experimental design
- Part B Recent applications
- Appendices
- Solutions to exercises
- References
- Index
Summary
[…] they replace the atmosphere by a different atmosphere, which Napier Shaw described in […] Manual of Meteorology, as a fairy tale, but which today we would call a model.
E. N. Lorenz: The Essence of Chaos.The structure and circulation of the atmosphere
The atmosphere exists as a thin, almost spherical, shell around the earth. Within the atmosphere differences in the thermal structure characterise a sequence of layers from the troposphere, adjacent to the earth's surface, through to the thermosphere and beyond. Figure 2.1 shows an average profile of the temperature of the atmosphere, indicating the layers and the boundaries between them.
In the study of greenhouse gases, the most important distinction is that between the troposphere and the stratosphere. The troposphere comprises about the lowest 85% of the atmosphere (in terms of mass) and is characterised by a negative lapse rate, i.e. temperature generally decreases with height. In contrast, in the stratosphere, temperature generally increases with height. While Figure 2.1 shows a mean distribution, the height of the tropopause varies significantly with latitude, being higher (typically 16 km) in the tropics than it is at high latitudes (typically 8 km).
Table 2.1 lists some of the components of the dry atmosphere. The main constituents, those in the upper group in the table, are distributed virtually uniformly in space and time, although it has recently become possible to measure the very small changes in oxygen content and use them to interpret aspects of the carbon cycle.
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- Inverse Problems in Atmospheric Constituent Transport , pp. 22 - 40Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002