Begin of page section:
Page sections:

  • Go to contents (Accesskey 1)
  • Go to position marker (Accesskey 2)
  • Go to main navigation (Accesskey 3)
  • Go to sub navigation (Accesskey 4)
  • Go to additional information (Accesskey 5)
  • Go to page settings (user/language) (Accesskey 8)
  • Go to search (Accesskey 9)

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
Page settings:

English en
Deutsch de
Search
Login

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
Search:

Search for details about Uni Graz
Close

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections


Search

Begin of page section:
Main navigation:

Page navigation:

  • University

    University
    • About the University
    • Organisation
    • Faculties
    • Library
    • Working at University of Graz
    • Campus
    Developing solutions for the world of tomorrow - that is our mission. Our students and our researchers take on the great challenges of society and carry the knowledge out.
  • Research Profile

    Research Profile
    • Our Expertise
    • Research Questions
    • Research Portal
    • Promoting Research
    • Research Transfer
    • Ethics in Research
    Scientific excellence and the courage to break new ground. Research at the University of Graz creates the foundations for making the future worth living.
  • Studies

    Studies
    • Prospective Students
    • Students
  • Community

    Community
    • International
    • Location
    • Research and Business
    • Alumni
    The University of Graz is a hub for international research and brings together scientists and business experts. Moreover, it fosters the exchange and cooperation in study and teaching.
  • Spotlight
Topics
  • Our digital Advent calendar
  • Sustainable University
  • Researchers answer
  • Work for us
Close menu

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:
You are here:

University of Graz News Researchers at the University of Graz provide evidence of climate change in the atmosphere

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Monday, 24 November 2025

Researchers at the University of Graz provide evidence of climate change in the atmosphere

View of the Earth from above, irregular white bands of clouds, blue horizon ©Rawf8 - stock.adobe.com

The expansion of the troposphere is presumably linked to changes in weather patterns on Earth. Photo: Rawf8 - stock.adobe.com

Human-induced climate change is leaving clear traces in the atmosphere. Using satellite data, researchers at the Wegener Center at the University of Graz proved that the troposphere has expanded by up to 500 meters in some regions over the last two decades. The increase was most pronounced in the mid-latitudes of the northern hemisphere. This is also likely to be a sign of changes in the strong westerly winds, known as jet streams, and thus influences weather patterns. The new findings were recently published in the research journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics.


The tropopause is a good indicator of climate change. It forms the boundary between the troposphere – the weather layer – and the stratosphere above it. It lies at an altitude of eight to 17 kilometres above the Earth's surface, with the distance being greatest over the tropics and least over the poles. With temperatures between -40 and -80 degrees Celsius, the tropopause is one of the coldest places in the atmosphere. When the weather layer warms up, for example due to rising CO2 emissions, it expands. This causes the boundary to the stratosphere to move upwards.

A new study shows: “Over the past 23 years, the tropopause has risen worldwide by between 100 and almost 500 metres, depending on the region. The shift was most pronounced in the mid-latitudes of the northern hemisphere, particularly over Asia in autumn and winter. The development over the last years is particularly striking, with the weather layer above the tropics warming unusually strongly,” reports Florian Ladstädter, lead author of the publication. The geophysicist is part of the Global Climate Analysis research group led by Andrea Steiner at the Wegener Center at the University of Graz. Using satellite data from radio occultation measurements, the scientists have documented global changes in the tropopause over more than two decades. “Our study provides, for the first time, a reliable, seasonally and spatially high-resolution picture that reveals both regional details and differences over the course of the year,” says Andrea Steiner, emphasising the significance of the publication. 

According to the researchers, it can be assumed that the observed trend indicates changes in both the jet streams in the troposphere and global circulation in the stratosphere – with consequences for global meteorological phenomena as well as for weather patterns at the regional level.

Publication
Ladstädter, F., Stocker, M., Scher, S., and Steiner, A. K.: Observed changes in the temperature and height of the globally resolved lapserate tropopause, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 25, 16053–16062, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-25-16053-2025

 

If you want to understand how the climate and other natural phenomena work, studying physics is a good choice.

created by Gudrun Pichler

Related news

Semester abroad without barriers: University of Graz wins award for promoting inclusion

The University of Graz has been awarded the Internationalization Award for its new inclusion initiative. Students with fewer opportunities now also receive financial support for their semester abroad outside Europe.

Fair distribution: Researchers determine just greenhouse gas budgets for all EU regions

Ten years ago, on 12 December 2015, the Paris Climate Agreement was signed at the UN Climate Conference. In order to limit global warming to well below two degrees, only a certain amount of CO2 may be emitted worldwide. While the focus was originally on national emission targets, more than 200 subnational regions and almost 300 cities have now adopted their own targets. But how many emissions are they fairly entitled to? Researchers at the University of Graz have now developed transparent criteria for fair distribution at the subnational level for the first time and determined corresponding greenhouse gas budgets for all European regions. The paper was published today in the scientific journal Nature Communications.

Chemical Christmas show at the University of Graz: An explosive evening at the Schauspielh

At the beginning of December, the University of Graz transformed the theater into a laboratory: as part of “Chemical Life,” teacher training students staged a chemical Christmas show for Styrian school classes—complete with ethanol rockets, nitrogen snow, and glowing effects. An evening designed to inspire interest in studying chemistry.

Train by train: Koralm railway accelerates exchange between the Universities

Lectures at the University of Klagenfurt in the morning, seminars at the University of Graz in the afternoon: Austria's longest tunnel and a journey time of around 45 minutes make it easy. The Koralm railway increases the speed of networking between the two university locations. The collaboration builds on existing cooperation - for example in the areas of teacher training, Slavic studies and as employers, the universities are well coordinated.

Begin of page section:
Additional information:

University of Graz
Universitaetsplatz 3
8010 Graz
Austria
  • Contact
  • Web Editors
  • Moodle
  • UNIGRAZonline
  • Imprint
  • Data Protection Declaration
  • Accessibility Declaration
Weatherstation
Uni Graz

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections

Begin of page section:

End of this page section. Go to overview of page sections