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Lapse rate is defined as the negative rate of change (of a variable) with respect to height. In the tropopause, the lapse rate is positive as temperature decreases as height increases. In the stratosphere the lapse rate is negative as the temperature increases with respect to height.—Precedingunsigned comment added by60.240.120.95 (talk)10:51, 31 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Is there any mountain high enough to peak above a part of the troposphere thin enough to be peaked by the mountain at hand? This data could do great to the article, in addition, if more than one mountain could do so, could it do so with the stratosphere too? I doubt so since the Everest is like almost 9 km tall but even then, I dunno really... Herle King 07:35, 14 March 2007 (UTC)
From what I understand, the tropopause frequently dips below Everest at the summit. This information is relevant to climbers since when it happens, even those with the most freakish VO2's can't summit without oxygen.Peteymills (talk)04:29, 11 February 2011 (UTC)[reply]
http://weather.uwyo.edu/upperair/sounding.htmlThat site has several years of upper air data from around the world. Looking at the stations nearest Everest, the tropopause seems to be around 16-17km high in that region, which is nearly twice the height of Everest. It's at too low a latitude to reach it. The reports about the 1996 disaster referring to "the stratosphere falling in" actually mean the air pressure dropped to a level normally found at over 9000m; but the tropopause is defined by temperature and lapse rates, not pressure.
However looking at the data from Alaska stations, it appears that at times the tropopause in the Anchorage area can drop as low as 6000-6500m (though it is typically more like 8000-9000). Denali therefore might occasionally sit on or just above it.Walshie79 (talk)14:28, 10 January 2019 (UTC)[reply]
The soundings include the temperature at various heights. From that you can deduce the lapse rate and whether the 2C/km thresholds are met.Walshie79 (talk)10:10, 14 January 2019 (UTC)[reply]
I am currently reworking the troposphere article and I feel that this article would be better as a section of that one. I will merge the contents from here. The draft is at:User:NHSavage/sandbox. Comments please.--NHSavage08:58, 25 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure describing that there are two "types" of tropopause's is correct. It might be better to describe the tropopause as being a disjointed boundary. It's height being a function of near surface temperature. Warm air "pushes" the tropopause to higher levels as the air expands and cold air drops the tropopause as the air is contracted (of course to understand this completely the tropopause needs to be explained as having atmosphereicstability). Therefore, with large surface temperature variations, there will be large height variations. In some cases as much as 20,000 ft height change in 500 nm (typically around polar front). There are three principle tropopause height changes, each associated with significant temperature changes from atmosphereic cells of theHadley Cell,Ferrel cell andPolar cell.--Pugzi08:34, 13 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
why does the thickness of the troposphere get thinner as the latitude increases?Maybe you can add the explanation to itUser:Tikai08:07, 21 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This section could use a rework, with all due respect, although I think the original author is eminently more qualified to do so than I. In terms of a focused encyclopedic entry on the tropopause, I think that a lot of the detail on the stratosphere and troposphere is supernumerary. Focus on the tropopause itself and leave detail about the broader troposphere/stratosphere to another article.
I'm also missing the explanation that led me to the page in first place -- I know I knew this back in SS3201:Physics of the Atmosphere, but I've forgotten over the intervening 20 years:why is the tropopause? I know dT<0 below and dT>0 above, but I can't remember why, its driving me nuts, and thatis a broader element that would be relevant to the tropopause article. It's there because the temperature trend changes -- why does it change?
Off to the stratosphere article to try and remember...
... some time later ...Ah, yes, I thought that might be it. Still the reason for the cooling/warming switch is valid here.
208.118.34.80 (talk)20:51, 30 August 2008 (UTC)dirkman[reply]
the section on this pages that states the altitude ranges for the troposphere directly contradict what the "troposphere" page says.... whcih one is correct?—Precedingunsigned comment added by134.84.11.45 (talk)17:54, 29 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
In this article, it is indicated that commercial aircraft generally fly below the tropopause. However, the exact opposite assertion is made in the Stratosphere article.152.5.254.24 (talk)21:07, 10 June 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The article says the exact definition of the tropopause is "the lowest level at which the lapse rate decreases to 2 °C/km or less, provided that the average lapse rate between this level and all higher levels within 2 km does not exceed 2 °C/km." How can this be an exact definition when it does not specify the range over which the lapse rate is to be averaged? A short range could produce a much higher tropopause than a long one. --Vaughan Pratt (talk)22:27, 3 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I added headings to divide the article section but what goes in each section needs to be reviewed.
Hi Jetstreamer, why did you revert my corrections? Now the heights are wrong again, a citation is missing again, a wrong source is back, and the statements about lapse rates are wrong again. If you want kilometers instead of feet, just edit that, but don't do a complete revert. --Suaheli (talk)06:07, 30 March 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Suaheli. I opted to try to solve the new issue that arose between you and me through this talk page. Both thestratosphere andtroposphere are mentioned in the article as the tropopause is a boundary layer between these two layers. If you go to such articles you'll find that both of them deal with the Earth's atmosphere only. It is therefore not appropriate to mention the extraterrestrial tropopause in the article. Pleaselet me know what you think. Regards.--Jetstreamer Talk22:21, 19 April 2012 (UTC)[reply]
The article has a lot to say about thederivative of air temperature with respect to altitude, since vanishing of the derivative is the basic concept behind the tropopause (pace the WMO procedure defining it more precisely). However nowhere does it say anything about theactual temperature at the tropopause, suitably averaged.
Since both surface temperature and troposphere altitude decrease with increasing latitude (in the sense of increasing angular distance from the equator), it is natural to ask which of these two effects dominates in determining the temperature of the tropopause as a function of latitude. In particular what is the annual average temperature of the tropopause at the equator, and at the poles?Vaughan Pratt (talk)18:37, 28 February 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Needs a section ontropopause folding.Just granpa (talk)19:10, 6 April 2019 (UTC)[reply]
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