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A temperature inversion is a meteorological phenomenon where air temperature increases
with height.
Normal atmospheric conditions
Usually, within the lower atmosphere (the troposphere) the air near the
surface of the Earth is warmer than the air above it, largely because the atmosphere is
heated from below by solar radiation absorbed at the surface.
Hot air, however, rises. This is convection in which the warmer air rises up, to be replaced with cooler air which is then
heated. It is this process that leads to cloud building, thermals, and other convection related atmospheric behaviour.
How inversions occur
Sometimes the gradient is inverted, so that the air gets colder nearer the surface of the Earth: this is a temperature
inversion. It can be created by the movement of air masses of different temperature moving over each other. A warm air mass
moving over a colder one can "shut off" the convection effects, keeping the cooler air mass trapped below. (see capping inversion). It commonly occurs at night: when solar heating
ceases, the surface cools by radiation, and cools the immeadiately overlying atmosphere. Over most of Antarctica, there is a near-permanent inversion.
Consequences of an Inversion
With the disruption of normal convection, a number of phenomena are associated with a temperature inversion. One common effect
is the general "stillness" of the air, as is dirty or foggy air which can no longer be pulled away from the surface.
The index of refraction of air decreases as the air temperature
increases, a side effect of hotter air being less dense. Normally this results in distant objects being shortened vertically, an
effect that is easy to see at sunset (where the sun is "squished" into an orb). In an inversion the normal pattern is reversed,
and distant objects are instead streched out or appear to be above the horizon. This leads to the interesting optical effects of
Fata Morgana or mirage.
Similarly, radio (being part of the electromagnetic
spectrum, like light) can be re-directed by such inversions. This is why it is not uncommon to hear radio (and sometimes TV)
broadcasts from seemingly impossible distances on foggy nights. The signal, still more than powerful enough to receive even at
hundreds or thousands of miles or kilometres, would normally be refracted up and away from the
ground-based antenna, but is now refracted back down
instead. This phenomenon is called tropospheric ducting, or a tropo duct.
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