A trajectory-based estimate of the tropospheric ozone column using the residual method
Authors
Schoeberl, M.
Ziemke, J.R.
Bojokv, B.
Livesey, N.
Duncan, B.
Strahan, S.
Froidevaux, L.
Kulawik, S.
Barthia, P.K.
Chandra, S.
Levelt, P.F.
Witte, J.C.
Thompson, A.M.
Cuevas, E.
Redondas, A.
Tarasick, D.W.
Davies, J.
Bodeker, G.
Hansen, G.
Johnson, B.J.
Oltmans, S.J.
Vömel, H.
Allaart, M.
Kelder, H.
Newchurch, M.
Godin-Beekmann, S.
Ancellet, G.
Clude, H.
Anderson, S.B.
Kyrö, E.
Parrondos, M.
Yela, M.
Zablocki, G.
Moore,D.
Dier, H.
von der Gathen, P.
Viatte, P.
Stübi, R.
Calpini, B.
Skrivankova, P.
Dorokhov, V.
De Backer, H.
Schmidlin, F.J.
Coetzee, G.
Fujiwara, M.
Thouret, V.
Posny, F.
Morris, G.
Merrill, J.
Leong, C.P.
Koenig-Langlo, G.
Joseph, E.
Discipline
Earth and related Environmental sciences
Subject
tropospheric Ozone
Pollution
air quality
Audience
General Public
Scientific
Date
2007Publisher
IRM
KMI
RMI
Metadata
Show full item recordDescription
We estimate the tropospheric column ozone using a forward trajectory model to increase the horizontal resolution of the Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) derived stratospheric column ozone. Subtracting the MLS stratospheric column from Ozone Monitoring Instrument total column measurements gives the trajectory enhanced tropospheric ozone residual (TTOR). Because of different tropopause definitions, we validate the basic residual technique by computing the 200-hPa-to-surface column and comparing it to the same product from ozonesondes and Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer measurements. Comparisons show good agreement in the tropics and reasonable agreement at middle latitudes, but there is a persistent low bias in the TTOR that may be due to a slight high bias in MLS stratospheric column. With the improved stratospheric column resolution, we note a strong correlation of extratropical tropospheric ozone column anomalies with probable troposphere-stratosphere exchange events or folds. The folds can be identified by their colocation with strong horizontal tropopause gradients. TTOR anomalies due to folds may be mistaken for pollution events since folds often occur in the Atlantic and Pacific pollution corridors. We also compare the 200-hPa-to-surface column with Global Modeling Initiative chemical model estimates of the same quantity. While the tropical comparisons are good, we note that chemical model variations in 200-hPa-to-surface column at middle latitudes are much smaller than seen in the TTOR.
Citation
Schoeberl, M.; Ziemke, J.R.; Bojokv, B.; Livesey, N.; Duncan, B.; Strahan, S.; Froidevaux, L.; Kulawik, S.; Barthia, P.K.; Chandra, S.; Levelt, P.F.; Witte, J.C.; Thompson, A.M.; Cuevas, E.; Redondas, A.; Tarasick, D.W.; Davies, J.; Bodeker, G.; Hansen, G.; Johnson, B.J.; Oltmans, S.J.; Vömel, H.; Allaart, M.; Kelder, H.; Newchurch, M.; Godin-Beekmann, S.; Ancellet, G.; Clude, H.; Anderson, S.B.; Kyrö, E.; Parrondos, M.; Yela, M.; Zablocki, G.; Moore,D.; Dier, H.; von der Gathen, P.; Viatte, P.; Stübi, R.; Calpini, B.; Skrivankova, P.; Dorokhov, V.; De Backer, H.; Schmidlin, F.J.; Coetzee, G.; Fujiwara, M.; Thouret, V.; Posny, F.; Morris, G.; Merrill, J.; Leong, C.P.; Koenig-Langlo, G.; Joseph, E. (2007). A trajectory-based estimate of the tropospheric ozone column using the residual method. , Issue Journal of Geophysical Research, vol 112, D24S49, doi:10.1029/2007JD008773, IRM,Identifiers
Type
Article
Peer-Review
Not pertinent
Language
eng