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The origin of air in the lowermost stratosphere is investigated with measurements from the NASA ER‐2 aircraft. Air with high water vapor mixing ratios was observed in the stratosphere at θ∼330–380 K near 40 N in May 1995, indicating the influence of intrusions of tropospheric air. Assuming that observed tracer‐tracer relationships reflect mixing lines between tropospheric and stratospheric air masses, we calculate mixing ratios of H 2 O (12–24 ppmv) and CO 2 for the admixed tropospheric air at θ=352–364 K. Temperatures on the 355 K surface at 20–40 N were low enough to dehydrate air to these values. While most ER‐2 CO 2 data in both hemispheres are consistent with tropical or subtropical air entering the lowermost stratosphere, measurements from May 1995 for θ<362 K suggest that entry of air from the midlatitude upper troposphere can occur in conjunction with mixing processes near the tropopause.
Hintsa et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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