Local and Remote Response of Ozone to Arctic Stratospheric Circulation Extremes

Intense natural circulation variability associated with stratospheric sudden warmings, vortex intensifications, and final warmings is a typical feature of the winter Arctic stratosphere. The attendant changes in transport, mixing, and temperature create pronounced perturbations in stratospheric ozon...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hong, Hao-Jhe, Reichler, Thomas
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2020-790
https://acp.copernicus.org/preprints/acp-2020-790/
Description
Summary:Intense natural circulation variability associated with stratospheric sudden warmings, vortex intensifications, and final warmings is a typical feature of the winter Arctic stratosphere. The attendant changes in transport, mixing, and temperature create pronounced perturbations in stratospheric ozone. Understanding these perturbations is important because of their potential feedbacks with the circulation and because ozone is a key trace gas of the stratosphere. Here, we use MERRA-2 reanalysis to contrast the typical spatiotemporal structure of ozone during sudden warming and vortex intensification events. We examine the changes of ozone in both the Arctic and the Tropics, document the underlying dynamical mechanisms for the observed changes, and analyze the entire life-cycle of the stratospheric events – from the event onset in mid-winter to the final warming in early spring. Over the Arctic and during sudden warmings, ozone undergoes a rapid and long-lasting increase, which only gradually decays to climatology before the final warming. In contrast, vortex intensifications are passive events, associated with decreases in Arctic ozone that gradually intensify during early winter and decay thereafter. The persistent loss of Arctic ozone during vortex intensifications is dramatically compensated by sudden-warming-like increases after the final warming. In the Tropics, the changes in ozone from Arctic circulation events are obscured by the influences from the quasi-biennial oscillation. After controlling for this effect, coherent reductions in tropical ozone can be seen during the onset of sudden warmings, and also during the final warmings that follow vortex intensifications. Our results demonstrate that Arctic circulation extremes have significant local and remote influences on the distribution of stratospheric ozone.