Abstract

Abstract. The Infrared Atmospheric Sounder Instrument (IASI) allows global coverage with very high spatial resolution and its measurements are promising for long-term ozone monitoring. In this study, Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) O3 profiles and IASI O3 partial columns (1013.25–345 hPa) are assimilated in a chemistry transport model to produce 6-hourly analyses of tropospheric ozone for 6 years (2008–2013). We have compared and evaluated the IASI-MLS analysis and the MLS analysis to assess the added value of IASI measurements. The global chemical transport model MOCAGE (MOdèle de Chimie Atmosphérique à Grande Echelle) has been used with a linear ozone chemistry scheme and meteorological forcing fields from ERA-Interim (ECMWF global reanalysis) with a horizontal resolution of 2° × 2° and 60 vertical levels. The MLS and IASI O3 retrievals have been assimilated with a 4-D variational algorithm to constrain stratospheric and tropospheric ozone respectively. The ozone analyses are validated against ozone soundings and tropospheric column ozone (TCO) from the OMI-MLS residual method. In addition, an Ozone ENSO Index (OEI) is computed from the analysis to validate the TCO variability during the ENSO events. We show that the assimilation of IASI reproduces the variability of tropospheric ozone well during the period under study. The variability deduced from the IASI-MLS analysis and the OMI-MLS measurements are similar for the period of study. The IASI-MLS analysis can reproduce the extreme oscillation of tropospheric ozone caused by ENSO events over the tropical Pacific Ocean, although a correction is required to reduce a constant bias present in the IASI-MLS analysis.

Highlights

  • Tropospheric ozone (O3) is the third most important greenhouse gas (Houghton et al, 2001)

  • A total of 6 years of 6-hourly tropospheric ozone fields have been derived by assimilating Infrared Atmospheric Sounder Instrument (IASI) and Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) ozone measurements in the MOCAGE chemistry transport model (CTM)

  • The assimilation of IASI tropospheric columns combined with MLS stratospheric profiles was first validated against ozonesondes in the tropical band (15◦ S– 15◦ N), providing a statistically robust validation

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Summary

Introduction

Tropospheric ozone (O3) is the third most important greenhouse gas (Houghton et al, 2001). It influences the atmospheric radiative forcing as one of the main absorbers of infrared and ultraviolet radiation (Wang et al, 1980; Lacis et al, 1990). It has a strong effect on human health and vegetation. Due to its relatively long lifetime (∼ 2 weeks in the troposphere), the global variability of tropospheric ozone is the combination of the complex interactions between anthropogenic emissions, chemical production and destruction, long-range transport, and stratosphere–troposphere exchanges. To determine the origin of this trend, it is important to evaluate the relative contributions between natural variability and anthropogenic forcing

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