Abstract

A number of features of the stratospheric ozone distribution were revealed by joint millimeterwave observations of ozone emission lines at 142,175 and 110,836 GHz carried out during the winter periods of 1988–1989 and 1989–1990 at the Radioastronomical Observatory of the P.N. Lebedev Physical Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences and at the Onsala Space Observatory of Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden. It is shown that vertical ozone variations observed at the two observatories were connected with large scale dynamical processes that occurred in the stratosphere. When the stratosphere was relatively undisturbed the ozone profiles obtained at both observatories were close to the ozone reference model given by Keating and Pitts. There were periods during a stratospheric warming when the ozone content measured at the two observatories in the 25–40 km altitude range was higher by a factor ~ 1.5 than the model values. Dynamical processes in the stratosphere also gave rise to rapid (4 h duration) and large deviations from the model ozone profile. An ozone layer depletion was observed in the 27–55 km altitude range. The observed ozone variations illustrate the sensitivity of the ozone distribution to stratospheric disturbances including stratospheric warmings.

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