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Investigation of satellite vertical sensitivity on long-term retrieved lower tropospheric 1 ozone trends.

Authors :
Pope, Richard J.
O'Connor, Fiona M.
Dalvi, Mohit
Kerridge, Brian J.
Siddans, Richard
Latter, Barry G.
Barret, Brice
Flochmoen, Eric Le
Boynard, Anne
Chipperfield, Martyn P.
Wuhu Feng
Pimlott, Matilda A.
Dhomse, Sandip S.
Retscher, Christian
Wespes, Catherine
Rigby, Richard
Source :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Discussions; 1/4/2024, following p1-25, 33p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Ozone is a potent air pollutant in the lower troposphere and an important short-lived climate forcer (SLCF) in the upper troposphere. Studies investigating long-term trends in tropospheric column ozone (TCO3) have shown large-scale spatiotemporal inconsistencies. Here, we investigate the long-term trends in lower tropospheric column ozone (LTCO3, surface-450 hPa sub-column) by exploiting a synergy of satellite and ozonesonde datasets and an Earth System Model (UKESM) over North America, Europe and East Asia for the decade 2008-2017. Overall, we typically find small LTCO3 linear trends with large uncertainty ranges from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) and the Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI), while model simulations indicate a stable LTCO3 tendency. Trends in the satellite a priori datasets show negligible trends indicating year-to-year sampling is not an issue. The application of the satellite averaging kernels AKs) to the UKESM ozone profiles, accounting for the satellite vertical sensitivity and allowing for like-for41 like comparisons, has a limited impact on the modelled LTCO3 tendency in most cases. While, in relative terms, this is more substantial (e.g. in the order of 100%), the absolute magnitudes of the model trends show negligible change. However, as the model has a near-zero tendency, artificial trends were imposed on the model time-series (i.e. LTCO3 values rearranged from smallest to largest) to test the influence of the AKs but simulated LTCO3 trends remained small. Therefore, the LTCO3 tendency between 2008 and 2017 in northern hemispheric regions are likely small, with large uncertainties, and it is difficult to detect any small underlying linear trends due to inter-annual variability or other factors which require further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16807367
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174987129
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2023-3109