Abstract

Abstract. The NASA Global Modeling Initiative has developed a combined stratosphere/troposphere chemistry and transport model which fully represents the processes governing atmospheric composition near the tropopause. We evaluate model ozone distributions near the tropopause, using two high vertical resolution monthly mean ozone profile climatologies constructed with ozonesonde data, one by averaging on pressure levels and the other relative to the thermal tropopause. At the tropopause, model ozone is high-biased in the SH tropics and NH midlatitudes by ~45% in a 4° latitude ×5° longitude model simulation. Doubling the resolution to 2°×2.5° increases the NH high bias to ~60%, and reduces the tropical bias to ~30%, apparently due to decreased horizontal transport between the tropics and extratropics in the higher-resolution simulation. These ozone biases do not appear to be due to an overly vigorous residual circulation, insufficient convection, or excessive stratosphere/troposphere exchange, and so may be due to insufficient vertical resolution or excessive vertical diffusion near the tropopause. In the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere, model/measurement intercomparisons are strongly affected by the averaging technique. Compared to the pressure-averaged climatology, NH and tropical mean model lower stratospheric biases are >20%. In the upper troposphere, the 2°×2.5° simulation shows mean high biases of ~20% and ~35% during April in the tropics and NH midlatitudes, respectively. This apparently good model/measurement agreement degrades when relative-to-tropopause averages are considered, with upper troposphere high biases of ~30% and 70% in the tropics and NH midlatitudes. This occurs because relative-to-tropopause averaging better preserves the larger cross-tropopause O3 gradients which are seen in the daily sonde data, but not in daily model profiles. Relative-to-tropopause averages therefore more accurately reveal model/measurement discrepancies. The relative annual cycle of ozone near the tropopause is reproduced very well in the model Northern Hemisphere midlatitudes. In the tropics, the model amplitude of the near-tropopause annual cycle is weak. This is likely due to the annual amplitude of mean vertical upwelling near the tropopause, which analysis suggests is ~30% weaker than in the real atmosphere.

Highlights

  • The tropopause is surrounded by a transition region that is strongly influenced by both tropospheric and stratospheric processes (Holton et al, 1995; Wennberg, et al, 1998; Rood et al, 2000; Gettelman et al, 2004; Pan et al, 2004)

  • The annual cycle of tropical total ozone is represented well, though model values are about 20 DU low compared to the TOMS observations

  • The Global Modeling Initiative (GMI) Combo model fully resolves the important processes in the troposphere and stratosphere, uses a transport scheme shown to represent well vertical gradients in the NTR, and has been integrated using a modern GCMbased meteorological data set to minimize the possible effects of anomalous vertical diffusion that affects analyzed meteorological data

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Summary

Introduction

The tropopause is surrounded by a transition region that is strongly influenced by both tropospheric and stratospheric processes (Holton et al, 1995; Wennberg, et al, 1998; Rood et al, 2000; Gettelman et al, 2004; Pan et al, 2004). D. Considine et al.: Evaluation of GMI Combo model near-tropopause ozone and measured RTT-averaged profiles at the same fraction of the tropopause pressure.

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