Development of a New Set of Mean Atmospheric Soundings for the Tropical North Atlantic and Caribbean Sea Team Leader: Jason Dunion (AOML/HRD): Jason.Dunion@noaa.gov Objectives: ¥ Test the following hypotheses related to JordanÕs (1958) Mean Soundings for the West Indies Area: 1. JordanÕs work may need to be revisited based on recent advances in our understanding of the Saharan Air Layer (SAL). 2. Since the SAL can cover and area the size of the continental U.S. and can reach as far west as the western Caribbean Sea, Central America and the Gulf of Mexico, we hypothesize that his 10-yr climatology may have contained a mixture of dry Saharan and moist tropical atmospheric soundings. This suggests that the North Atlantic contains a bi-modal distribution of soundings and that a single mean sounding (i.e. JordanÕs) may not effectively represent the atmospheric conditions that occur in this basin during the hurricane season. 3. We hypothesize that new GOES SAL tracking satellite imagery presented by Dunion and Velden (2004) can be used to identify dry, dusty SAL vs moist tropical (non-SAL) atmospheric soundings. These two types of distinct soundings will be partitioned to create a new set of mean Òhurricane seasonÓ atmospheric soundings (SAL and non-SAL) for the tropical North Atlantic and Caribbean Sea region. ¥ Develop a new set of atmospheric soundings for the tropical North Atlantic and Caribbean Sea region that will better represent the mean conditions that affect this part of the globe. ¥ Use modeling studies to assess the impact of these new atmospheric soundings (SAL vs non-SAL) on tropical cyclone genesis and intensity change. Methods: ¥ Generate an archive of basin-wide GOES SAL tracking imagery that will span from 1995-present (00 & 12 UTC); ¥ Generate a quality controlled archive of rawinsonde data that spans from 1995-2002 (00 & 12 UTC) for the following stations: Grand Cayman, Miami, FL, San Juan, PR, and Guadeloupe; Accomplishments: ¥ Submitted a manuscript to the Journal of Climate that presents evidence that JordanÕs (1958) Mean Soundings for the West Indies Area likely contained a large percentage of SAL soundings and presents a preliminary new set of atmospheric soundings (SAL and non-SAL) for the tropical North Atlantic and Caribbean Sea. This study uses GOES SAL tracking satellite imagery to identify hundreds of rawinsondes from the 2002 hurricane season that were launched in SAL versus non-SAL environments; References: Dunion, J.P., and C.S. Marron, 2007: A Reexamination of the Jordan mean tropical sounding based on awareness of the Saharan Air Layer: Results from 2002. J. Climate. (Accepted). Jordan, C.L., 1958: Mean soundings for the West Indies area. J. Meteor., 15, 91-97. Future Work: ¥ Develop a new set of atmospheric soundings for the tropical North Atlantic and Caribbean Sea using GOES SAL tracking satellite imagery and 8 years (1995-2002) of Caribbean rawinsonde data;