524 SAUCIER, HALL, AND NELSON the residence half-time of the stratosphere for aerosol-size particles is measured in years, depending on particle size and varying with altitude, season, and geographic position. In comparison, the correSponding residence half-time in the troposphere, where the medium is subjected to greater mixing, is of the order of just a £éw weeks. Con- sequently one is led to surmise that, several months or ‘yearstter in- jection of the debris into the atmosphere, the vertical distribudogrot radioactivity should be characterized by relatively low #oncentrations of radioactive particles and rela agp:small vertical’gradientsoftheir concentration 4h the tropospkere™ and By-g rapid upwiied increase in concentration thyeugh the tr¥popaust sé pe -lower- _Stratosphere. In a broad sense such a. distributign diediy exists, ag*hasbeen veri- fied by long periods of simpiing at varios levels of the atmo In initiating this work,weplaced faith.in.this view, beeving j he e. could separate$hose storms which- onentirelytroposphericftrom the more convective ones which penetrated_irito-the stratosp major part of the- problem in this.eatenchwail tei;DEE:i height can be determined by means of ground-bagéd radar, by vations from aircraft, and indirectly with less precision from ‘roubigpe meteorological data. It wouldthen be a relatively simple task to relate storm height to tropopause height, to radioactive concentrations if#’fhe precipitation samples collected, and to atmospheric radioactivity being determined by other agencies to assess the mechanism of thunderstorm collection and washout of radioactive particles. However, things are not so simple. A factor to be taken into ac- count is that the air from which most of the water is condensed comes from the lower troposphere. Low-level air converges horizontally and rises; the air at the top diverges horizontally as the air from below rises into those levels. The storm is so dominated by the low-level air that the washout mechanism applies largely to particles that en- tered the storm in the lower troposphere. There will be particles aloft which enter into the precipitate because of entrainmentof air into the vertical storm circulation in middle and high levels, injection of water masses upward into the air above the storm during its process of upward development, and some horizontal motion of air through the upper part of the storm where those winds are significantly greater than the horizontal displacement of the storm. Perhaps an even greater difficulty arises from the large varia- tions in radioactive concentration in the atmosphere, the troposphere, the lower stratosphere, and the tropopause region, as found by others in their careful sampling and analyzing of content. Beyond molecularand eddy-diffusion processes, there are organized differential movements of air that produce sharp vertical and horizontal gradients in atmospheric composition, Also, the tropopause cannot be treated as a substantial air surface in this scale. The tropopause may displace it-

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