Title: SBUV/2 Observations of Atmospheric Response to Solar Variations
1Rotational Timescales
SBUV/2 Observations of Atmospheric Response to
Solar Variations
Impulsive Events
- Solar irradiance shows clear rotational
modulation for ? lt 265 nm. Amplitude reaches
6-7 at 205 nm. - Ozone response depends on chemical time
constants, peaks at 2 hPa.
- Solar proton events can inject large quantities
of charged particles into the upper atmosphere. - Increased ionization leads to rapid ozone loss in
upper stratosphere (gt 40). - Short chemical time constants ? typical recovery
time of 1-2 days. - Solar cycle 23 shows logarithmic relationship
between peak proton flux gt10 MeV and maximum
ozone depletion 0.5 hPa.
Matthew DeLand Science Systems and Applications,
Inc. (SSAI)
Background
- SBUV/2 instruments measure stratospheric profile,
total column ozone, solar UV irradiance between
160-400 nm. - Continuous measurement record available since
1978. Future data expected through 2015.
DeLand et al. 2004
Chandra and McPeters 1994
Solar Cycle Timescales
Ozone
- Ozone responses to solar cycle variations
observed in stratospheric layers and integrated
total column. - Model predictions of ?O3 response to ?FUV are
consistent with data for total ozone, disagree on
altitude dependence.
- Spectral range of solar irradiance observed by
SBUV/2 directly affects stratosphere. Solar
variability increases significantly at shorter
wavelengths.
Hood 1997
McCormack and Hood 1996
McCormack and Hood 1996
Polar Mesospheric Clouds
- Ionization also increases production of odd
nitrogen (NOx), which has chemical lifetime of
several months. - Transport chemistry predicts sustained ozone
depletion in middle stratosphere. Observations
support this prediction, but dynamical variations
complicate interpretation.
- Polar mesospheric clouds (PMCs) are composed of
water ice, form at 80-85 km in summer polar
regions. - SBUV/2 instrument detects PMCs as albedo
enhancement at short wavelengths. - Occurrence frequency shows consistent seasonal
pattern, variations in amplitude.
- Variations in cumulative seasonal frequency are
anti-correlated with solar Lyman alpha
variations. This is consistent with
photochemical model predictions.
DeLand et al. 2003
Conclusions
References
Chandra, S., and R. D. McPeters, The solar cycle
variation of ozone in the stratosphere inferred
from Nimbus 7 and NOAA 11 satellites, J. Geophys.
Res. 99, 20,665-20,671, 1994. DeLand, M. T., E.
P. Shettle, G. E. Thomas, and J. J. Olivero,
Solar backscattered ultraviolet (SBUV)
observations of polar mesospheric clouds (PMCs)
over two solar cycles, J. Geophys. Res. 108(D8),
8445, doi10.1029/2002JD002398, 2003. DeLand, M.
T., R. P. Cebula, and E. Hilsenrath, Observations
of solar spectral irradiance change during cycle
22 from NOAA-9 Solar Backscattered Ultraviolet
Model 2 (SBUV/2), J. Geophys. Res. 109, D06304,
doi10.1029/2003JD004074, 2004. Hood, L. L., The
solar cycle variation of total ozone Dynamical
forcing in the lower stratosphere, J. Geophys.
Res. 102, 1355-1370, 1997. Jackman, C. H., E. L.
Fleming, and F. M. Vitt, Influence of extremely
large solar proton events in a changing
stratosphere, J. Geophys. Res. 105,
11,659-11,670, 2000. McCormack, J. P., and L. L.
Hood, Apparent solar cycle variations of upper
stratospheric ozone and temperature Latitude
and seasonal dependences, J. Geophys. Res. 101,
20,933-20,944, 1996.
- SBUV/2 instruments observe both solar UV forcing
and atmospheric response. - Solar UV irradiance data from NOAA-9 and NOAA-11
SBUV/2 are available on-line. Mg II index data
are also available. - Reprocessed Version 8 profile ozone data from all
instruments (available June 2004) will have
improved accuracy for trends. - Continuation of SBUV/2 measurements provides
invaluable multi-decade data sets for long-term
studies.
DeLand et al. 2004
Jackman et al. 2000