Abstract

Abstract. In a previous study the quasi-instantaneous chemical impacts (rapid adjustments) of strongly enhanced methane (CH4) mixing ratios have been analysed. However, to quantify the influence of the respective slow climate feedbacks on the chemical composition it is necessary to include the radiation-driven temperature feedback. Therefore, we perform sensitivity simulations with doubled and quintupled present-day (year 2010) CH4 mixing ratios with the chemistry–climate model EMAC (European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, Hamburg version – Modular Earth Submodel System (ECHAM/MESSy) Atmospheric Chemistry) and include in a novel set-up a mixed-layer ocean model to account for tropospheric warming. Strong increases in CH4 lead to a reduction in the hydroxyl radical in the troposphere, thereby extending the CH4 lifetime. Slow climate feedbacks counteract this reduction in the hydroxyl radical through increases in tropospheric water vapour and ozone, thereby dampening the extension of CH4 lifetime in comparison with the quasi-instantaneous response. Changes in the stratospheric circulation evolve clearly with the warming of the troposphere. The Brewer–Dobson circulation strengthens, affecting the response of trace gases, such as ozone, water vapour and CH4 in the stratosphere, and also causing stratospheric temperature changes. In the middle and upper stratosphere, the increase in stratospheric water vapour is reduced with respect to the quasi-instantaneous response. We find that this difference cannot be explained by the response of the cold point and the associated water vapour entry values but by a weaker strengthening of the in situ source of water vapour through CH4 oxidation. However, in the lower stratosphere water vapour increases more strongly when tropospheric warming is accounted for, enlarging its overall radiative impact. The response of the stratosphere adjusted temperatures driven by slow climate feedbacks is dominated by these increases in stratospheric water vapour as well as strongly decreased ozone mixing ratios above the tropical tropopause, which result from enhanced tropical upwelling. While rapid radiative adjustments from ozone and stratospheric water vapour make an essential contribution to the effective CH4 radiative forcing, the radiative impact of the respective slow feedbacks is rather moderate. In line with this, the climate sensitivity from CH4 changes in this chemistry–climate model set-up is not significantly different from the climate sensitivity in carbon-dioxide-driven simulations, provided that the CH4 effective radiative forcing includes the rapid adjustments from ozone and stratospheric water vapour changes.

Highlights

  • Methane (CH4) is the second-most important greenhouse gas (GHG) directly emitted by human activity

  • The REF mixed-layer ocean (MLO) CH4 mixing ratios were compared to three different observational data sets that are independent from the observational estimate that serves as input for the lower boundary condition to ensure an objective evaluation

  • The larger increase factors in the MLO sensitivity simulations are in line with the reduced prolongation of the tropospheric CH4 lifetime compared to the fSST experiments

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Summary

Introduction

Methane (CH4) is the second-most important greenhouse gas (GHG) directly emitted by human activity. Winterstein et al (2019) assessed chemical feedback processes and their RI in simulations forced by doubled (2×) and quintupled (5×) present-day (year 2010) CH4 mixing ratios As their simulation set-up used prescribed SSTs and sea ice concentrations (SICs) and suppressed surface temperature changes, the parameter changes in their simulations match the rapid adjustment and ERF concept The slow feedbacks are assessed as the difference between the full response (as simulated in the MLO simulations) and the rapid adjustments (as simulated in the simulations with prescribed SSTs and SICs) To our knowledge, this is the first study assessing the response to strong increases in CH4 mixing ratios in a fully coupled CCM, meaning that the interactive model system includes atmospheric dynamics, atmospheric chemistry, and ocean thermodynamics.

Description of the model and simulation strategy
Assessment of reference simulations
Tropospheric temperature response and associated climate feedbacks
Chemical composition
Findings
Radiatively and dynamically driven atmospheric temperature response
Summary and conclusions
Full Text
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