. Earth Science News .
Atmospheric Warming Expanding The Tropics

Scientists examined 27 years of satellite data to detect jet stream migration, such as this portrayal of global temperature change. The reddish colors represent faster warming than the global average, and the bluish shades represent slower-than-average warming. Image credit: University of Washington/Qiang Fu
by Phil Berardelli
TerraDaily US Editor
Washington DC (SPX) May 29, 2006
Earth's atmosphere seems to be warming in a way that is drawing the jet streams away from the equator and toward the poles, expanding tropical areas in the process, researchers reported Friday. If the data hold up, it means some of Earth's desert areas will be expanding, and drought conditions could strike formerly well-watered regions around the globe.

Reporting in the May 26 issue of Science, researchers at the University of Washington, in Seattle, elsewhere said they examined remote-sensing data from microwave sounding units aboard Tiros-N and NOAA 6 to NOAA 14 satellites that was collected from 1979 to 2005. The data show the troposphere � the lower atmosphere � has been heating up faster in twin bands at around 30 degrees north and south latitudes than it has been warming elsewhere.

The team also found that each hemisphere's jet stream has moved toward the pole by about 1 degree of latitude, or 70 miles, over the same time period.

�The enhanced tropospheric warming in the subtropical regions increases the temperature gradients at higher latitudes, but decreases atmospheric temperature gradients in the lower latitudes,� lead researcher Qiang Fu told TerraDaily.com. �In this way the jet streams, the location of maximum westerly wind aloft, were pushed poleward.�

Qiang and colleagues also found slower-than-expected warming in the stratosphere � the upper atmosphere - in the same locations, which combined with the tropospheric warming seems to be causing the jet stream migration.

Co-author John M. Wallace said it is not clear yet whether the jet stream slippages can prove global warming or are merely an anomaly, but he added that if they continue, the long-term impact on regional rainfall patterns could be serious.

"The jet streams mark the edge of the tropics, so if they are moving poleward, that means the tropics are getting wider," Wallace said.

"If they continue to move poleward at this rate until the end of this century, very dry areas could nudge farther toward the poles, perhaps by a few hundred miles," he told TerraDaily.com.

The faster-warming tropospheric band at 30 degrees north latitude traverses the southern United States, southern China and North Africa. At 30 degrees south latitude, it crosses southern Australia, South Africa and southern South America.

The troposphere is the layer of air ranging from the Earth's surface up to about 7.5 miles in altitude. It is the part of the atmosphere in which most weather occurs.

Computer models have predicted a poleward shift of jet streams during the 21st century, but the models also expected faster warming to occur in the tropical stratosphere. Instead, the research found faster warming at the 30 degrees latitude mark in the troposphere in both hemispheres.

Wallace said the new research suggests that faster subtropical warming of the troposphere, which moves the jet streams, also could shift mid-latitude storm tracks poleward � meaning, perhaps, more hurricanes striking farther north. The same phenomenon could reduce winter precipitation in regions such as southern Europe - including the Alps - and southern Australia.

"It's a very intriguing problem,� Fu said, �why the increase in tropospheric temperatures and the decrease in stratospheric temperatures in the subtropical region happens in tandem, almost exactly."

Related Links
U. Washington Atmospheric Sciences

In The Baltics Spring And Smoke Is In The Air
Riga (AFP) May 03, 2006
Around the European Union's Baltic member states, one sure sign that spring has arrived is the acrid smell of smoke from grass fires in the crisp north European air. This year, in Latvia alone, the emergency services have recorded nearly 3,000 cases of people setting light to grass in unattended fields, meadows, even back gardens.







  • Hospitals overwhelmed in Indonesian quake zone
  • New Orleans again vulnerable as new hurricane season opens
  • Earthquake in ocean near Tonga
  • Indonesia quake teams using tsunami experience, says UN chief

  • Climate change threatens EU biodiversity target: Britain
  • Tropical Forests Leak Nitrogen Back Into Atmosphere
  • Greenhouse Gas/Temp Feedback Mechanism May Raise Warming Further
  • Canada wants Kyoto climate-change deal scrapped: report

  • Surrey Satellite Acquires Enhanced Imaging From Sira
  • Digital Globe European Partner To Supply Sat Imagery To European Commission
  • NASA GOES Mission Goes On Schedule
  • ESA Makes World Fire Maps Available Online

  • US oil and gas industry heads into hurricane season still weak
  • Strategic Russian pipeline to be re-routed 400 kilometres from Baikal
  • Bush hails House bill opening Alaska wildlife refuge to drilling
  • Oil prices firmer on Iran, US demand concerns

  • Orange Juice Could Be A Source Of Foodborne Disease
  • Iran Bird Flu On UN Agenda
  • No Cancer Link For Pot Smokers
  • New Vaccine Development Provides Potent Long-Lasting Immunity

  • Live Via Satellite: Scientists To Track Caspian Sea Sturgeons
  • Satellite Tracking Reveals Migratory Mysteries Of Atlantic Loggerhead Turtles
  • How Ancient Whales Lost Their Legs, Got Sleek And Conquered The Oceans
  • Brazil Creates Buffer Zone Around Coral Reefs Off Atlantic Coast

  • Managing Indian E-Waste
  • Finland hopes to clean up Russian shipping in Baltic
  • Test For Dioxin Sensitivity In Wildlife Could Result From New Study
  • Exxon Valdez Oil Found In Tidal Feeding Grounds Of Ducks, Sea Otters

  • MIT Poet Develops 'Seeing Machine'
  • Robotic Joystick Reveals How Brain Controls Movement
  • Cure For Reading Glasses May Be In View
  • When It Comes To Privacy, Gender Matters

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement