This morning, a strong low-level temperature inversion caused the air quality to decline over western Washington and created false radar echoes on local weather radar.
Reminder: an inversion occurs when temperature increases with height, a reversal (inversion) of the normal situation in which temperature decreases with height.
Let me show what lower atmospheric temperatures looked like this morning.
At 5 AM at Forks, on the northwest Washington coast, temperatures increased by about 10°C (roughly 18°F) in the lower few thousand feet (red line is temperature). Above the inversion, the temperature declined with height
An inversion was also present at Seattle-Tacoma Airport at 6 AM this morning, with about a 6°F warming between 400 ft and 1800 ft (see below)
Inversions create zones of strong vertical stability, inhibiting the vertical mixing of pollutants, allowing concentrations to increase near the surface.
This was quite apparent this morning as air quality declined to the moderate level (yellow colors) in the graphic from the EPA AirNow website.
Strong-level inversions can also mess up local weather radar, acting as an atmospheric lens that bends the radar beam down. As a result, the radar beam reflects off the surface and is reflected back as a false echo, indicating precipitation where none is occurring.
Over land, spring temperature inversions weaken rapidly during the day as the land surface warms, as illustrated by the temperatures over SeaTac at 4 PM (below). No more inversion as temperatures at the surface warmed into the lower 70s!










