Notholt, JustusGolchert, Sven Heinrich WolfgangSven Heinrich WolfgangGolchert2020-03-092020-03-092009-03-09https://media.suub.uni-bremen.de/handle/elib/30This thesis reports on observations of tropical stratospheric water vapour by the ground-based microwave radiometer/spectrometer WaRAM2 in 2007. The 22GHz receiver is set up at Mérida Atmospheric Research Station on top of Pico Espejo, Venezuela (8°32'N, 71°03'W, 4765m above sea level). It is the only such sensor that continuously operates at tropical latitudes. The high altitude site is ideally suitable for microwave observations, because most tropospheric water vapour is located below the sensor. Water vapour plays a key role in middle atmospheric processes. Because of its large infrared resonance, it strongly participates in the radiative budget, both in terms of a greenhouse effect at lower altitudes and radiative cooling at higher altitudes. It is a source gas for the highly reactive hydroxyl radical, and exerts indirect effects on ozone destruction in the formation of polar stratospheric clouds. Due to its long lifetime, water vapour also serves as a dynamical tracer.enBitte wählen Sie eine Lizenz aus: (Unsere Empfehlung: CC-BY)water vapourstratospheretropicsmicrowave remote sensingground-based observation530Stratospheric Water Vapour in the Tropics: Observations by Ground-Based Microwave RadiometryWasserdampf in der tropischen Stratosphäre: Messungen mit bodengebundener Mikrowellen-RadiometrieDissertationurn:nbn:de:gbv:46-00101709-11