Soden, B. J., and R. Fu, 1995: A satellite analysis of deep convection,
upper-tropospheric humidity, and the greenhouse effect. Journal
of Climate, 8(10), 2333-2351.
Abstract: This paper combines satellite measurements of the upwelling
6.7-µm radiance from TOVS with cloud-property information from
ISCCP and outgoing longwave radiative fluxes from ERBE to analyze the climatological
interactions between deep convection, upper-tropospheric humidity, and
atmospheric greenhouse trapping. The satellite instruments provide unmatched
spatial and temporal coverage, enabling detailed examination of regional,
seasonal, and interannual variations between these quantities. The present
analysis demonstrates that enhanced tropical convection is associated with
increased upper-tropospheric relative humidity. The positive relationship
between deep convection and upper-tropospheric humidity is observed for
both regional and temporal variations, and is also demonstrated to occur
over a wide range of space and time scales. Analysis of ERBE outgoing longwave
radiation measurements indicates that regions or periods of increased upper-tropospheric
moisture are strongly correlated with an enhanced greenhouse trapping,
although the effects of lower-tropospheric moisture and temperature lapse
rate are also observed to be important. The combined results for the Tropics
provide a picture consistent with a positive interrelationship between
deep convection, upper-tropospheric humidity, and the greenhouse effect.
In extratropical regions, temporal variations in upper-tropospheric humidity
exhibit little relationship to variations in deep convection, suggesting
the importance of other dynamical processes in determining changes in upper-tropospheric
moisture for this region. Comparison of the observed relationships between
convection, upper-tropospheric moisture,and greenhouse trapping with climate
model simulations indicates that the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory
(GFDL) GCM is qualitatively successful in capturing the observed relationship
between these quantities. This evidence supports the ability of the GFDL
GCM to predict upper-tropospheric water vapor feedback, despite the model's
relatively simplified treatment of moist convective processes.