Polar stratospheric clouds initiated by mountain waves in a global chemistry–climate model: a missing piece in fully modelling polar stratospheric ozone depletion
An important source of polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs), which play a crucial role in controlling polar stratospheric ozone depletion, is the temperature fluctuations induced by mountain waves. These enable stratospheric temperatures to fall below the threshold value for PSC formation in regions of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Atmospheric chemistry and physics 2020-10, Vol.20 (21), p.12483-12497 |
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Zusammenfassung: | An important source of polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs),
which play a crucial role in controlling polar stratospheric ozone
depletion, is the temperature fluctuations induced by mountain waves.
These enable stratospheric temperatures to fall below the threshold value
for PSC formation in regions of negative temperature perturbations or
cooling phases induced by the waves even if the synoptic-scale temperatures
are too high. However, this formation mechanism is usually missing in global
chemistry–climate models because these temperature fluctuations are neither
resolved nor parameterised. Here, we investigate in detail the episodic and
localised wintertime stratospheric cooling events produced over the
Antarctic Peninsula by a parameterisation of mountain-wave-induced
temperature fluctuations inserted into a 30-year run of the global
chemistry–climate configuration of the UM-UKCA (Unified Model – United
Kingdom Chemistry and Aerosol) model. Comparison of the probability
distribution of the parameterised cooling phases with those derived from
climatologies of satellite-derived AIRS brightness temperature measurements
and high-resolution radiosonde temperature soundings from Rothera Research
Station on the Antarctic Peninsula shows that they broadly agree with the
AIRS observations and agree well with the radiosonde observations,
particularly in both cases for the “cold tails” of the distributions. It
is further shown that adding the parameterised cooling phase to the
resolved and synoptic-scale temperatures in the UM-UKCA model results in a
considerable increase in the number of instances when minimum temperatures
fall below the formation temperature for PSCs made from ice water during
late austral autumn and early austral winter and early austral spring, and
without the additional cooling phase the temperature rarely falls below the
ice frost point temperature above the Antarctic Peninsula in the model.
Similarly, it was found that the formation potential for PSCs made from ice
water was many times larger if the additional cooling is included. For PSCs
made from nitric acid trihydrate (NAT) particles it was only during October that the additional
cooling is required for temperatures to fall below the NAT formation
temperature threshold (despite more NAT PSCs occurring during other months).
The additional cooling phases also resulted in an increase in the surface
area density of NAT particles throughout the winter and early spring, which
is important for ch |
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ISSN: | 1680-7324 1680-7316 1680-7324 |
DOI: | 10.5194/acp-20-12483-2020 |