Nitrogen compounds and ozone in the stratosphere: comparison of MIPAS satellite data with the chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1

The chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1 (E5/M1) in a setup extending from the surface to 80 km with a vertical resolution of about 600m near the tropopause with nudged tropospheric meteorology allows a direct comparison with satellite data of chemical species at the same time and location. Here we...

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Main Authors: Brühl, Christoph, Steil, Benedikt, Stiller, Gabriele P., Funke, Bernd, Jöckel, Patrick
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Karlsruhe 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5445/ir/1000068510
https://publikationen.bibliothek.kit.edu/1000068510
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5445/ir/1000068510 2023-05-15T13:43:43+02:00 Nitrogen compounds and ozone in the stratosphere: comparison of MIPAS satellite data with the chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1 Brühl, Christoph Steil, Benedikt Stiller, Gabriele P. Funke, Bernd Jöckel, Patrick 2007 PDF https://dx.doi.org/10.5445/ir/1000068510 https://publikationen.bibliothek.kit.edu/1000068510 en eng Karlsruhe Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC-BY-NC-SA Text article-journal Journal Article ScholarlyArticle 2007 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5445/ir/1000068510 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1 (E5/M1) in a setup extending from the surface to 80 km with a vertical resolution of about 600m near the tropopause with nudged tropospheric meteorology allows a direct comparison with satellite data of chemical species at the same time and location. Here we present results out of a transient 10 years simulation for the period of the Antarctic vortex split in September 2002, where data of MIPAS on the ENVISATsatellite are available. For the first time this satellite instrument opens the opportunity, to evaluate all stratospheric nitrogen containing species simultaneously with a good global coverage, including the source gas N2O and ozone which allows an estimate for NOx-production in the stratosphere. We show correlations between simulated and observed species in the altitude region between 10 and 50 hpa for different latitude belts, together with the Probability Density Functions (PDFs) of model results and observations. This is supplemented by global maps on pressure levels showing the comparison between the satellite and the simulated data sampled at the same time and location. We demonstrate that the model in most cases captures the partitioning in the nitrogen family, the diurnal cycles and the spatial distribution within experimental uncertainty. This includes even variations due to tropospheric clouds. There appears to be, however, a problem to reproduce the observed nighttime partitioning between N2O5 and NO2 in the middle stratosphere using the recommended set of reaction coefficients and photolysis data. Text Antarc* Antarctic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
description The chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1 (E5/M1) in a setup extending from the surface to 80 km with a vertical resolution of about 600m near the tropopause with nudged tropospheric meteorology allows a direct comparison with satellite data of chemical species at the same time and location. Here we present results out of a transient 10 years simulation for the period of the Antarctic vortex split in September 2002, where data of MIPAS on the ENVISATsatellite are available. For the first time this satellite instrument opens the opportunity, to evaluate all stratospheric nitrogen containing species simultaneously with a good global coverage, including the source gas N2O and ozone which allows an estimate for NOx-production in the stratosphere. We show correlations between simulated and observed species in the altitude region between 10 and 50 hpa for different latitude belts, together with the Probability Density Functions (PDFs) of model results and observations. This is supplemented by global maps on pressure levels showing the comparison between the satellite and the simulated data sampled at the same time and location. We demonstrate that the model in most cases captures the partitioning in the nitrogen family, the diurnal cycles and the spatial distribution within experimental uncertainty. This includes even variations due to tropospheric clouds. There appears to be, however, a problem to reproduce the observed nighttime partitioning between N2O5 and NO2 in the middle stratosphere using the recommended set of reaction coefficients and photolysis data.
format Text
author Brühl, Christoph
Steil, Benedikt
Stiller, Gabriele P.
Funke, Bernd
Jöckel, Patrick
spellingShingle Brühl, Christoph
Steil, Benedikt
Stiller, Gabriele P.
Funke, Bernd
Jöckel, Patrick
Nitrogen compounds and ozone in the stratosphere: comparison of MIPAS satellite data with the chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1
author_facet Brühl, Christoph
Steil, Benedikt
Stiller, Gabriele P.
Funke, Bernd
Jöckel, Patrick
author_sort Brühl, Christoph
title Nitrogen compounds and ozone in the stratosphere: comparison of MIPAS satellite data with the chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1
title_short Nitrogen compounds and ozone in the stratosphere: comparison of MIPAS satellite data with the chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1
title_full Nitrogen compounds and ozone in the stratosphere: comparison of MIPAS satellite data with the chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1
title_fullStr Nitrogen compounds and ozone in the stratosphere: comparison of MIPAS satellite data with the chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1
title_full_unstemmed Nitrogen compounds and ozone in the stratosphere: comparison of MIPAS satellite data with the chemistry climate model ECHAM5/MESSy1
title_sort nitrogen compounds and ozone in the stratosphere: comparison of mipas satellite data with the chemistry climate model echam5/messy1
publisher Karlsruhe
publishDate 2007
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5445/ir/1000068510
https://publikationen.bibliothek.kit.edu/1000068510
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_rights Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 License
Open Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-SA
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5445/ir/1000068510
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