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METO 637

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METO 637 Lesson 12 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: METO 637


1
METO 637
  • Lesson 12

2
Temperature and chlorine monoxide in the Arctic
3
TOMS data 3/11/90
4
Background
  • Dobson (1927), first noted that sudden changes in
    total ozone coincided with the passage of upper
    level fronts.
  • Shalamyanskiy and Romanshkina (1980) analyzed
    long aircraft flights that intersected both the
    polar and subtropical jets between 1974 and 1977.
    They found that the jet streams always coincided
    with regions of large gradients of total ozone.
    In regions outside the jet stream the total ozone
    gradients were small.

5
Background
  • Karol et al. 1980 compared total ozone
    measurements coincident with rawinsonde
    measurements.
  • They used the geopotential height on the 200 mb
    surface to identify the sub-tropical jet stream,
    and on the 300 mb surface to identify the polar
    jet stream. Found that over the course of a month
    these boundaries differed by less than 80 m.
  • Also found that the ozone value at the position
    of the boundary was constant to within 2.
  • Shapiro et al. (1978,1987) and Uccellini (1985)
    found a strong coincidence between the sharp
    gradients in total ozone and upper level jet
    streams/frontal zone tropopause folding.

6
Upper Troposphere Fronts
  • Associated with waves in the upper troposphere
    Rossby waves
  • Where the Jet Streams are found
  • Subtropical front separates the tropical
    airmass from the midlatitude airmass
  • Polar front separates the midlatitude airmass
    from the polar airmass
  • Storms and weather patterns tend to follow the
    position of the fronts
  • If the position of the fronts show a long-term
    trend with time this means that the weather
    patterns have moved with time a climate change

7
Fronts and Weather
8
Regimes
  • The total ozone field can be separated into
    distinct regions.
  • At the ground these are known as air masses. In
    the stratosphere a new term must be defined
    regime
  • Four regimes are identified
  • (a) tropical regime between the subtropical
    front and the equator
  • (b) mid-latitude regime between the
    subtropical and polafr fronts.
  • (c) polar regime between the polar front and
    the polar vortex.
  • (d) arctic regime within the polar vortex.
    Note that this regime only exists in the winter
    months.

9
Schematic of the total ozone versus latitude
10
Latitudinal Average for Total OzoneMarch 11, 1990
(Hudson et al., 2003)
11
Ozone profiles sorted by regime
12
TOMS Image with RawinsondesN. America
March 11, 1990
Polar Front
Subtropical Front
Hudson et al. (2003)
13
Rawinsonde Temperature Profiles Separated by
Regime
Hudson et al. (2003)
14
Trends in total ozone
  • Trends that are found in the official reports are
    zonal averages. Not broken down by regimes.
    Expressed as per cent per decade.
  • Most trends are calculated for the Northern
    mid-latitudes where most politicians live?.
  • Usually averages are made from 25 to 60 degrees
    latitude.
  • (1) Always within a meteorological hemisphere
  • (2) TOMS data does not exist above 60 degrees
    North in the winter uses backscattered solar
    ultraviolet
  • The data show a strong seasonal component this
    is removed (deseasonalized) before the trend is
    determined.

15
Total ozone 25 to 60 N
Red tropical Green mid-latitude Dark blue
polar Light blue arctic Black - zonal
16
Total ozone with seasonal component removed
LINEAR FITS Overall (black) 3.2 decade Polar
(Blue) 2.1 per decade Mid-latitude (Green) 1.7
per decade Tropical (Red) 1.7 per decade
Linear fit from Jan 1979 to May 1991
17
Contributions to the Equivalent Effective
Stratospheric Chlorine
18
Total Mass of Ozone
  • Between 25 and 60 degrees latitude the zonal
    trend from 1979 to May 1991 is -3.2 per decade,
    whereas the trend for the tropical regime is
    -1.7, -1.7 for the mid-latitude regime, and
    -2.1 for the polar regime.
  • The difference between the zonal and regime
    trends can be explained by looking at the
    equation for the total mass of ozone
  • M AO0 APOP AMOM ATOT AAOA
  • A total area between 25 and 60N, and O0
    zonal mean column ozone
  • AP, AM, AT, AA, regime areas, and OP, OM, OT,
    OA regime mean column ozone

19
Total Mass of Ozone
  • Define the relative area as the ratio of the area
    of a regime to the total area between 25 and 60
    degrees North Then
  • O0 RPOP RMOM RTOT RAOA
  • One can get a trend if the regime Os varies with
    time, or the regime Rs varies with time, or
    both.
  • Over the period 1797 to 1991 the relative area of
    the tropical regime increased by 10, while that
    of the polar regime decreased by 15

20
The relative area as a function of time for the
Northern hemisphere
21
Deseasonalized Relative Areas
22
Relative contributions of each regime to the
change in ozone
23
Dynamics versus Chemistry
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