Abstract

Abstract. The new generation GISS climate model includes fully interactive chemistry related to ozone in historical and future simulations, and interactive methane in future simulations. Evaluation of ozone, its tropospheric precursors, and methane shows that the model captures much of the large-scale spatial structure seen in recent observations. While the model is much improved compared with the previous chemistry-climate model, especially for ozone seasonality in the stratosphere, there is still slightly too rapid stratospheric circulation, too little stratosphere-to-troposphere ozone flux in the Southern Hemisphere and an Antarctic ozone hole that is too large and persists too long. Quantitative metrics of spatial and temporal correlations with satellite datasets as well as spatial autocorrelation to examine transport and mixing are presented to document improvements in model skill and provide a benchmark for future evaluations. The difference in radiative forcing (RF) calculated using modeled tropospheric ozone versus tropospheric ozone observed by TES is only 0.016 W m−2. Historical 20th Century simulations show a steady increase in whole atmosphere ozone RF through 1970 after which there is a decrease through 2000 due to stratospheric ozone depletion. Ozone forcing increases throughout the 21st century under RCP8.5 owing to a projected recovery of stratospheric ozone depletion and increases in methane, but decreases under RCP4.5 and 2.6 due to reductions in emissions of other ozone precursors. RF from methane is 0.05 to 0.18 W m−2 higher in our model calculations than in the RCP RF estimates. The surface temperature response to ozone through 1970 follows the increase in forcing due to tropospheric ozone. After that time, surface temperatures decrease as ozone RF declines due to stratospheric depletion. The stratospheric ozone depletion also induces substantial changes in surface winds and the Southern Ocean circulation, which may play a role in a slightly stronger response per unit forcing during later decades. Tropical precipitation shifts south during boreal summer from 1850 to 1970, but then shifts northward from 1970 to 2000, following upper tropospheric temperature gradients more strongly than those at the surface.

Highlights

  • The new E2 version of tHheyGdISrSoclolimgayteamnoddel was run with provide a benchmark for future evaluations

  • A monthly mean Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer (TES) ozone climatology from 2005–2009 is sampled at the same locations and altitudes as the sonde data. These results can be compared with both the 2000s E2-R simulation and the E2-MERRA run, which was only performed for the 2000s as it was mainly intended for comparison with satellite observations

  • The transient and prescribed ozone iRF calculations differ in two main ways: the background state of the atmosphere varies with time in the former while constant present-day conditions for all background variables are used in the latter and the atmosphere is coupled to a dynamic ocean in the transient while prescribed ocean conditions are used in the offline calculations, which alters the base distribution of relevant fields such as clouds

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Summary

Introduction

The new E2 version of tHheyGdISrSoclolimgayteamnoddel was run with provide a benchmark for future evaluations. Historical 20th Century simulations show a fully interactive reactive cEheamricthal cSonystsittueenmts in simulations for the Coupled (CMIP5; Taylor eMt oadl.e,l2I0n1te2r)coaSmndpcatihreiesnoAnctmPerososjpehcter5icthCphheamseistry and Climate Model Intercomparison Project (ACCMIP; steady increase in whole atmosphere ozone RF through 1970 Lamarque et al, 2013). Ozone forcing increases throughout the 21st century under RCP8.5 owing to a projected recovery evaluate both present-day simulations and ozone trends over recent decades against OobsceervaatnionSs.cWiee tnhecnedescribe the radiative forcing due to ozone for historical simulations and of stratospheric ozone depletion and increases in methane, due to ozone and methane for future simulations. We but decreases under RCP4.5 and 2.6 due to reductions in evaluate the climate response to transient historical ozone emissions of other ozone precursors. We document the behavior of chemically reactive compounds in the version of the model used in the historical and future simulations in support of CMIP5/ACCMIP. The average of the historical tropospheric ozone simulated in that version of the model and similar simulations performed by the National Center for Atmospheric Research was described in Cionni et al (2011)

Climate model
Chemistry
Anthropogenic emissions
Natural emissions
Evaluation of total column amounts
Evaluation of vertical structure
Evaluation of tropospheric and stratospheric columns
33.9 E2-MERRA minus OMI-MLS
Ozone metrics and budget
Tracers of stratospheric circulation
Ozone precursors
Nitrogen dioxide
Carbon monoxide
Long-term ozone changes
Ozone variability
Present-day influence of ozone: model versus TES
Historical ozone forcing
Ozone forcing
Methane distribution
Methane emissions and oxidation
Methane concentration and forcing
Discussion and conclusions
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