A study of polar ozone depletion based on sequential assimilation of satellite data from the ENVISAT/MIPAS and Odin/SMR instruments

The objective of this study is to demonstrate how polar ozone depletion can be mapped and quantified by assimilating ozone data from satellites into the wind driven transport model DIAMOND, (Dynamical Isentropic Assimilation Model for OdiN Data). By assimilating a large set of satellite data into a...

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Main Authors: RÖSEVALL, JOHN, Murtagh, Donal, Urban, Joachim, Jones, Ashley
Language:unknown
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.chalmers.se/en/publication/42210
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spelling ftchalmersuniv:oai:research.chalmers.se:42210 2023-05-15T14:02:34+02:00 A study of polar ozone depletion based on sequential assimilation of satellite data from the ENVISAT/MIPAS and Odin/SMR instruments RÖSEVALL, JOHN Murtagh, Donal Urban, Joachim Jones, Ashley 2007 text https://research.chalmers.se/en/publication/42210 unknown https://research.chalmers.se/en/publication/42210 Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences ozone ozone depletion stratosphere data assimilation 2007 ftchalmersuniv 2022-12-11T06:56:57Z The objective of this study is to demonstrate how polar ozone depletion can be mapped and quantified by assimilating ozone data from satellites into the wind driven transport model DIAMOND, (Dynamical Isentropic Assimilation Model for OdiN Data). By assimilating a large set of satellite data into a transport model, ozone fields can be built up that are less noisy than the individual satellite ozone profiles. The transported fields can subsequently be compared to later sets of incoming satellite data so that the rates and geographical distribution of ozone depletion can be determined. By tracing the amounts of solar irradiation received by different air parcels in a transport model it is furthermore possible to study the photolytic reactions that destroy ozone. In this study, destruction of ozone that took place in the Antarctic winter of 2003 and in the Arctic winter of 2002/2003 have been examined by assimilating ozone data from the ENVISAT/MIPAS and Odin/SMR satellite-instruments. Large scale depletion of ozone was observed in the Antarctic polar vortex of 2003 when sunlight returned after the polar night. By mid October ENVISAT/MIPAS data indicate vortex ozone depletion in the ranges 80–100% and 70–90% on the 425 and 475 K potential temperature levels respectively while the Odin/SMR data indicates depletion in the ranges 70–90% and 50–70%. The discrepancy between the two instruments has been attributed to systematic errors in the Odin/SMR data. Assimilated fields of ENVISAT/MIPAS data indicate ozone depletion in the range 10–20% on the 475 K potential temperature level, (~19 km altitude), in the central regions of the 2002/2003 Arctic polar vortex. Assimilated fields of Odin/SMR data on the other hand indicate ozone depletion in the range 20–30%. Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Arctic polar night Chalmers University of Technology: Chalmers research Antarctic Arctic The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection Chalmers University of Technology: Chalmers research
op_collection_id ftchalmersuniv
language unknown
topic Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences
ozone
ozone depletion
stratosphere
data assimilation
spellingShingle Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences
ozone
ozone depletion
stratosphere
data assimilation
RÖSEVALL, JOHN
Murtagh, Donal
Urban, Joachim
Jones, Ashley
A study of polar ozone depletion based on sequential assimilation of satellite data from the ENVISAT/MIPAS and Odin/SMR instruments
topic_facet Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences
ozone
ozone depletion
stratosphere
data assimilation
description The objective of this study is to demonstrate how polar ozone depletion can be mapped and quantified by assimilating ozone data from satellites into the wind driven transport model DIAMOND, (Dynamical Isentropic Assimilation Model for OdiN Data). By assimilating a large set of satellite data into a transport model, ozone fields can be built up that are less noisy than the individual satellite ozone profiles. The transported fields can subsequently be compared to later sets of incoming satellite data so that the rates and geographical distribution of ozone depletion can be determined. By tracing the amounts of solar irradiation received by different air parcels in a transport model it is furthermore possible to study the photolytic reactions that destroy ozone. In this study, destruction of ozone that took place in the Antarctic winter of 2003 and in the Arctic winter of 2002/2003 have been examined by assimilating ozone data from the ENVISAT/MIPAS and Odin/SMR satellite-instruments. Large scale depletion of ozone was observed in the Antarctic polar vortex of 2003 when sunlight returned after the polar night. By mid October ENVISAT/MIPAS data indicate vortex ozone depletion in the ranges 80–100% and 70–90% on the 425 and 475 K potential temperature levels respectively while the Odin/SMR data indicates depletion in the ranges 70–90% and 50–70%. The discrepancy between the two instruments has been attributed to systematic errors in the Odin/SMR data. Assimilated fields of ENVISAT/MIPAS data indicate ozone depletion in the range 10–20% on the 475 K potential temperature level, (~19 km altitude), in the central regions of the 2002/2003 Arctic polar vortex. Assimilated fields of Odin/SMR data on the other hand indicate ozone depletion in the range 20–30%.
author RÖSEVALL, JOHN
Murtagh, Donal
Urban, Joachim
Jones, Ashley
author_facet RÖSEVALL, JOHN
Murtagh, Donal
Urban, Joachim
Jones, Ashley
author_sort RÖSEVALL, JOHN
title A study of polar ozone depletion based on sequential assimilation of satellite data from the ENVISAT/MIPAS and Odin/SMR instruments
title_short A study of polar ozone depletion based on sequential assimilation of satellite data from the ENVISAT/MIPAS and Odin/SMR instruments
title_full A study of polar ozone depletion based on sequential assimilation of satellite data from the ENVISAT/MIPAS and Odin/SMR instruments
title_fullStr A study of polar ozone depletion based on sequential assimilation of satellite data from the ENVISAT/MIPAS and Odin/SMR instruments
title_full_unstemmed A study of polar ozone depletion based on sequential assimilation of satellite data from the ENVISAT/MIPAS and Odin/SMR instruments
title_sort study of polar ozone depletion based on sequential assimilation of satellite data from the envisat/mipas and odin/smr instruments
publishDate 2007
url https://research.chalmers.se/en/publication/42210
geographic Antarctic
Arctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Arctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
polar night
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
polar night
op_relation https://research.chalmers.se/en/publication/42210
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