Abstract

Abstract. The Brewer–Dobson circulation (BDC) is a stratospheric circulation characterized by upwelling of tropospheric air in the tropics, poleward flow in the stratosphere, and downwelling at mid and high latitudes, with important implications for chemical tracer distributions, stratospheric heat and momentum budgets, and mass exchange with the troposphere. As the photochemical losses of nitrous oxide (N2O) are well known, model differences in its rate of change are due to transport processes that can be separated into the mean residual advection and the isentropic mixing terms in the transformed Eulerian mean (TEM) framework. Here, the climatological impact of the stratospheric BDC on the long-lived tracer N2O is evaluated through a comparison of its TEM budget in the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model (WACCM), in a chemical reanalysis of the Aura Microwave Limb Sounder version 2 (BRAM2) and in a chemistry transport model (CTM) driven by four modern reanalyses: the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Interim reanalysis (ERA-Interim; Dee et al., 2011), the Japanese 55-year Reanalysis (JRA-55; Kobayashi et al., 2015), and the Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications version 1 (MERRA; Rienecker et al., 2011) and version 2 (MERRA-2; Gelaro et al., 2017). The effects of stratospheric transport on the N2O rate of change, as depicted in this study, have not been compared before across this variety of datasets and have never been investigated in a modern chemical reanalysis. We focus on the seasonal means and climatological annual cycles of the two main contributions to the N2O TEM budget: the vertical residual advection and the horizontal mixing terms. The N2O mixing ratio in the CTM experiments has a spread of approximately ∼20 % in the middle stratosphere, reflecting the large diversity in the mean age of air obtained with the same CTM experiments in a previous study. In all datasets, the TEM budget is closed well; the agreement between the vertical advection terms is qualitatively very good in the Northern Hemisphere, and it is good in the Southern Hemisphere except above the Antarctic region. The datasets do not agree as well with respect to the horizontal mixing term, especially in the Northern Hemisphere where horizontal mixing has a smaller contribution in WACCM than in the reanalyses. WACCM is investigated through three model realizations and a sensitivity test using the previous version of the gravity wave parameterization. The internal variability of the horizontal mixing in WACCM is large in the polar regions and is comparable to the differences between the dynamical reanalyses. The sensitivity test has a relatively small impact on the horizontal mixing term, but it significantly changes the vertical advection term and produces a less realistic N2O annual cycle above the Antarctic. In this region, all reanalyses show a large wintertime N2O decrease, which is mainly due to horizontal mixing. This is not seen with WACCM, where the horizontal mixing term barely contributes to the TEM budget. While we must use caution in the interpretation of the differences in this region (where the reanalyses show large residuals of the TEM budget), they could be due to the fact that the polar jet is stronger and is not tilted equatorward in WACCM compared with the reanalyses. We also compare the interannual variability in the horizontal mixing and the vertical advection terms between the different datasets. As expected, the horizontal mixing term presents a large variability during austral fall and boreal winter in the polar regions. In the tropics, the interannual variability of the vertical advection term is much smaller in WACCM and JRA-55 than in the other experiments. The large residual in the reanalyses and the disagreement between WACCM and the reanalyses in the Antarctic region highlight the need for further investigations on the modeling of transport in this region of the stratosphere.

Highlights

  • The Brewer–Dobson circulation (BDC; Dobson et al, 1929; Brewer, 1949; Dobson, 1956) in the stratosphere is characterized by upwelling of tropospheric air to the stratosphere in the tropics, followed by poleward transport in the stratosphere and extra-tropical downwelling

  • In this study we analyze the representation of the BDC in Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model (WACCM) through an analysis of the transformed Eulerian mean (TEM) budget of N2O, and we evaluate the simulation of this budget through comparisons with the Belgian Assimilation System of Chemical ObsErvation (BASCOE) chemistry transport model (CTM) and the BRAM2 chemical reanalysis

  • The tropical upwelling increases the abundance of N2O mostly in the mid–high stratosphere with the maximum contribution in the summer tropics, whereas the downwelling decreases it mostly in the wintertime extra-tropics in the middle and low stratosphere. This reflects the path followed by the deep branch of the BDC (Birner and Bönisch, 2011). These features are very similar across all datasets (Fig. 3), but noticeable differences appear during the austral winter (Fig. 4): the tropical upwelling has a larger secondary maximum in the southern tropics with JRA-55 and MERRA-2 than with the other datasets, and the extra-tropical downwelling extends to the South Pole in WACCM-Chemistry-Climate Model Initiative (CCMI) and JRA-55 whereas it is mostly confined to the midlatitudinal surf zone in the other reanalyses

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Summary

Introduction

The Brewer–Dobson circulation (BDC; Dobson et al, 1929; Brewer, 1949; Dobson, 1956) in the stratosphere is characterized by upwelling of tropospheric air to the stratosphere in the tropics, followed by poleward transport in the stratosphere and extra-tropical downwelling. In order to contribute further to the S-RIP BDC activity, four different dynamical reanalyses are used here to drive the BASCOE CTM simulations, compute the N2O TEM budget and compare its components with the results derived from WACCM, namely the European Centre for MediumRange Weather Forecasts Interim reanalysis (ERA-Interim; Dee et al, 2011), the Japanese 55-year Reanalysis (JRA-55; Kobayashi et al, 2015), and the Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications version 1 (MERRA; Rienecker et al, 2011) and version 2 (MERRA-2; Gelaro et al, 2017). 2.5◦ × 1.9◦, L66 2.5◦ × 1.9◦, L66 2.5◦ × 2◦, L60 2.5◦ × 2◦, L60 2.5◦ × 2◦, L72 2.5◦ × 2◦, L72 3.75◦ × 2.5◦, L37

Data and method
BASCOE CTM
BASCOE reanalysis
TEM diagnostics
Latitude–pressure cross sections
Climatological seasonal cycles
Polar regions
Middle latitudes
Tropics
Interannual variability of the seasonal cycles
Findings
Summary and conclusions
Full Text
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