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Revisiting the mystery of recent stratospheric temperature trends

Authors :
Daniele Visioni
Eugene Rozanov
Sandip Dhomse
Neal Butchart
Martyn P. Chipperfield
John R. Christy
David W. J. Thompson
Amanda C. Maycock
Guang Zeng
Andrea Stenke
Alexander T. Archibald
Alexey Yu. Karpechko
William J. Randel
Andreas Chrysanthou
Giovanni Pitari
Florian Ladstädter
Luke D. Oman
Patrick Jöckel
Laura E. Revell
Hideharu Akiyoshi
Martin Dameris
Roger Saunders
Andrea K. Steiner
Douglas E. Kinnison
David A. Plummer
N. Luke Abraham
Martine Michou
Yousuke Yamashita
Makoto Deushi
Fiona M. O'Connor
Glauco Di Genova
Cheng-Zhi Zou
Oliver Kirner
Olaf Morgenstern
Source :
Geophys Res Lett, Geophysical Research Letters, 45 (18), Geophysical research letters
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union, 2018.

Abstract

Simulated stratospheric temperatures over the period 1979–2016 in models from the Chemistry-Climate Model Initiative are compared with recently updated and extended satellite data sets. The multimodel mean global temperature trends over 1979–2005 are -0.88 ± 0.23, -0.70 ± 0.16, and -0.50 ± 0.12 K/decade for the Stratospheric Sounding Unit (SSU) channels 3 (~40–50 km), 2 (~35–45 km), and 1 (~25–35 km), respectively (with 95% confidence intervals). These are within the uncertainty bounds of the observed temperature trends from two reprocessed SSU data sets. In the lower stratosphere, the multimodel mean trend in global temperature for the Microwave Sounding Unit channel 4 (~13–22 km) is -0.25 ± 0.12 K/decade over 1979–2005, consistent with observed estimates from three versions of this satellite record. The models and an extended satellite data set comprised of SSU with the Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit-A show weaker global stratospheric cooling over 1998–2016 compared to the period of intensive ozone depletion (1979–1997). This is due to the reduction in ozone-induced cooling from the slowdown of ozone trends and the onset of ozone recovery since the late 1990s. In summary, the results show much better consistency between simulated and satellite-observed stratospheric temperature trends than was reported by Thompson et al. (2012, https://doi.org/10.1038/nature11579) for the previous versions of the SSU record and chemistry-climate models. The improved agreement mainly comes from updates to the satellite records; the range of stratospheric temperature trends over 1979–2005 simulated in Chemistry-Climate Model Initiative models is comparable to the previous generation of chemistry-climate models.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00948276
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Geophys Res Lett, Geophysical Research Letters, 45 (18), Geophysical research letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2f28eab35eebab70bb23508bbb8c5bb3