Confused what the weather term ‘inversion’ means? Here’s what it is and why it happens
Take a drive up to Bogus Basin during the winter and look out over the Treasure Valley and you may see a haze hanging over Boise and its surrounding cities.
But for those below the haze … the view is not so interesting.
The phenomenon is a byproduct of inversions. You may have heard of them — it’s pretty hard not to if you live in the Boise area. It’s certainly not something unique to Idaho, but the Treasure Valley is particularly susceptible to inversions through the winter months because of its geological status as a valley.
But just like other weather terms like convection and trough, for many people inversion is one of those terms that you hear of but never really know what it means.
“Inversion means inverting the normal temperature profile,” Idaho News 6 chief meteorologist Scott Dorval recently told the Idaho Statesman as part of the new WeatherWhys series.
“We get warm air over the top of the cold air, that’s an inversion,” Dorval continued, “and that traps anything that’s produced; moisture or pollution gets trapped below that warm layer.”
So why exactly does that happen?
As warm air sweeps over the region, cold air that was already permeating the area drains into the valleys. That phenomenon becomes even more likely when snow is on the ground, which the Treasure Valley had until temperatures warmed up last week.
As the cool air sinks, the warm air comes in over the top and traps the cold air below. So if you were to travel from downtown Boise to the top of Bogus Basin Road, you would actually see the temperature rise instead of fall, the reverse of what is typically seen when heading to a higher altitude.
That flip in the progression of temperature, from colder at the bottom to warmer higher up, is called inversion.
For comparison, one day last week the high temperature in Boise was 36 degrees. Further north and away from the Treasure Valley, Billings, Montana, and Pendleton, Oregon, were a toasty 57 degrees.
So going back to the view from Bogus Basin — why does a haze hang over the Valley under inversion conditions?
Think of when oil and water are put in a beaker together. The oil will rise to the top and the water will sink to the bottom. That’s just like what happens with the cold air at the bottom and the warm air at the top. The meeting point of the two is where condensation forms and causes a haze.
“(The haze) traps more and more pollution,” Dorval said. “And any moisture that’s melting from the snow during the day goes into the air and it will start to cause some fog and low clouds to form.”
Lastly, the pollution that gets trapped in the Treasure Valley is what can cause the air quality to decrease.
The Idaho Department of Environmental Quality issued a moderate air quality advisory last week through Tuesday as inversion conditions continue to settle in the area.
“When we have inversions, we’re trapping basically the pollution, and so while we’re in this inversion we will likely have moderate air quality,” Dorval said. “It’s not really bad at all compared to what it’s like when we have the wildfire smoke in the summer and in the fall. But you know, for people that are sensitive to it, it can be an issue.”