Dictionary Definition
stratosphere n : the atmospheric layer between
the troposphere and the mesosphere
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The region of the uppermost atmosphere where temperature increases along with the altitude due to the absorption of solar UV radiation by ozone. The stratosphere extends from the tropopause (10-15 kilometers) to approximately 50 kilometers.
- layer of the earth's atmosphere located above the troposphere and below the mesosphere.
Extensive Definition
The stratosphere is the second major layer of
Earth's
atmosphere, just above the troposphere, and below the
mesosphere. It is
stratified in
temperature, with warmer layers higher up and cooler layers farther
down. This is in contrast to the troposphere near the Earth's
surface, which is cooler higher up and warmer farther down. The
border of the troposphere and stratosphere, the tropopause, is marked by
where this inversion begins, which in terms of atmospheric
thermodynamics is the equilibrium
level. The stratosphere is situated between about
10 km (6 miles) and 50 km
(31 miles) altitude above the surface at
moderate latitudes, while at the poles
it starts at about 8 km (5 miles) altitude.
The stratosphere is layered in temperature
because it is heated from above by absorption of ultraviolet radiation from
the Sun. Within
this layer, temperature increases as altitude increases (see
temperature
inversion); the top of the stratosphere has a temperature of
about 270 K
(−3°C or 26.6°F), just slightly
below the freezing point of water. This top is called the stratopause, above which
temperature again decreases with height. The vertical stratification,
with warmer layers above and cooler layers below, makes the
stratosphere dynamically
stable: there is no regular convection and associated
turbulence in this
part of the atmosphere. The heating is caused by an ozone layer
that absorbs solar ultraviolet
radiation, heating the upper layers of the stratosphere. The
base of the stratosphere occurs where heating by conduction
from above and heating by convection from below (through the
troposphere) balance out; hence, the stratosphere begins at lower
altitudes near the poles due to the lower ground temperature there.
Commercial airliners typically cruise at
an altitude near 10 km in temperate latitudes, in the lower reaches
of the stratosphere. They do this to stay above any hard weather.
This is to avoid atmospheric turbulence from the convection in the troposphere. Turbulence
experienced in the cruise phase of flight is often caused by
convective
overshoot from the troposphere below. Similarly, most gliders soar on thermal plumes
that rise through the troposphere above warm patches of ground;
these plumes end at the base of the stratosphere, setting a limit
to how high gliders can fly in most parts of the world. (Some
gliders do fly higher, using ridge
lift from mountain ranges to lift them into the
stratosphere.)
The stratosphere is a region of intense
interactions among radiative, dynamical, and chemical
processes, in which horizontal mixing of gaseous components
proceeds much more rapidly than vertical mixing. An interesting
feature of stratospheric circulation is the quasi-Biennial
Oscillation (QBO) in the tropical latitudes, which is driven by
gravity
waves that are convectively generated in the troposphere. The QBO induces
a secondary
circulation that is important for the global stratospheric
transport of tracers such as ozone or water
vapor.
In northern hemispheric winter,
sudden stratospheric warmings can often be observed which are
caused by the absorption of Rossby waves
in the stratosphere.
See also
- Léon Teisserenc de Bort (the discoverer of the stratosphere)
- Paris Gun (first artificial object to reach stratosphere)
- SR-71 Blackbird
- Concorde
- Lockheed U-2
- RQ-4 Global Hawk
- Twinjets service ceiling
- Le Grand Saut
stratosphere in Afrikaans: Stratosfeer
stratosphere in Arabic: ستراتوسفير
stratosphere in Bosnian: Stratosfera
stratosphere in Catalan: Estratosfera
stratosphere in Czech: Stratosféra
stratosphere in Danish: Stratosfæren
stratosphere in German: Stratosphäre
stratosphere in Modern Greek (1453-):
Στρατόσφαιρα
stratosphere in Spanish: Estratosfera
stratosphere in Esperanto: Stratosfero
stratosphere in Basque: Estratosfera
stratosphere in French: Stratosphère
stratosphere in Galician: Estratosfera
stratosphere in Korean: 성층권
stratosphere in Croatian: Stratosfera
stratosphere in Indonesian: Stratosfer
stratosphere in Italian: Stratosfera
stratosphere in Hebrew: סטרטוספירה
stratosphere in Lithuanian: Stratosfera
stratosphere in Hungarian: Sztratoszféra
stratosphere in Macedonian: Стратосфера
stratosphere in Dutch: Stratosfeer
stratosphere in Japanese: 成層圏
stratosphere in Norwegian: Stratosfæren
stratosphere in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Stratosfæren
stratosphere in Polish: Stratosfera
stratosphere in Portuguese: Estratosfera
stratosphere in Russian: Стратосфера
stratosphere in Slovak: Stratosféra
stratosphere in Serbian: Стратосфера
stratosphere in Finnish: Stratosfääri
stratosphere in Swedish: Stratosfär
stratosphere in Thai: สตราโทสเฟียร์
stratosphere in Vietnamese: Tầng bình lưu
stratosphere in Turkish: Stratosfer
stratosphere in Ukrainian: Стратосфера
stratosphere in Chinese: 平流层
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Appleton layer, CAT, F layer, Heaviside-Kennelly
layer, Olympian heights, Van Allen belt, acme, aerial heights, aerospace, aerosphere, air hole, air
pocket, airspace,
apex, belt, bump, ceiling, chemosphere, crosswind, dizzy heights,
elevation, eminence, empty space, ether, favorable wind, fog, front, head wind, heaven, heavens, height, heights, high-pressure area,
hole, ionosphere, isothermal
region, jetstream,
layer, lift, low-pressure area, lower
atmosphere, outer atmosphere, overcast, photosphere, pocket, raise, rise, rising ground, roughness, sky, soup, space, steep, stratum, substratosphere, tail
wind, tropopause,
troposphere,
trough, turbulence, upper atmosphere,
uprise, vantage ground,
vantage point, visibility, visibility zero,
zenith