Simulation of Stratospheric Water Vapor Trends: Impact on Stratospheric Ozone Chemistry

A transient model simulation of the 40-year time period 1960 to 1999 with the coupled climate-chemistry model (CCM) ECHAM4.L39(DLR)/CHEM shows a stratospheric water vapor increase over the last two decades of 0.7 ppmv and, additionally, a short-term increase after major volcanic eruptions. Furthermo...

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Main Authors: Stenke, A., Grewe, V.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/10370/
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author Stenke, A.
Grewe, V.
author_facet Stenke, A.
Grewe, V.
author_sort Stenke, A.
collection Unknown
description A transient model simulation of the 40-year time period 1960 to 1999 with the coupled climate-chemistry model (CCM) ECHAM4.L39(DLR)/CHEM shows a stratospheric water vapor increase over the last two decades of 0.7 ppmv and, additionally, a short-term increase after major volcanic eruptions. Furthermore, a long-term decrease in global total ozone as well as a short-term ozone decline in the tropics after volcanic eruptions are modeled. In order to understand the resulting effects of the water vapor changes on lower stratospheric ozone chemistry, different perturbation simulations were performed with the CCM ECHAM4.L39- (DLR)/CHEM feeding the water vapor perturbations only to the chemistry part. Two different long-term perturbations of lower stratospheric water vapor, +1 ppmv and +5 ppmv, and a short-term perturbation of +2 ppmv with an e-folding time of two months were applied. An additional stratospheric water vapor amount of 1 ppmv results in a 5–10% OH increase in the tropical lower stratosphere between 100 and 30 hPa. As a direct consequence of the OH increase the ozone destruction by the HOx cycle becomes 6.4% more effective. Coupling processes between the HOx-family and the NOx/ClOxfamily also affect the ozone destruction by other catalytic reaction cycles. The NOx cycle becomes 1.6% less effective, whereas the effectiveness of the ClOx cycle is again slightly enhanced. A long-term water vapor increase does not only affect gas-phase chemistry, but also heterogeneous ozone chemistry in polar regions. The model results indicate an enhanced heterogeneous ozone depletion during antarctic spring due to a longer PSC existence period. In contrast, PSC formation in the northern hemisphere polar vortex and therefore heterogeneous ozone depletion during arctic spring are not affected by the water vapor increase, because of the less PSC activity. Finally, this study shows that 10% of the global total ozone decline in the transient model run can be explained by the modeled water vapor increase, but the simulated ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
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Stenke, A. und Grewe, V. (2005) Simulation of Stratospheric Water Vapor Trends: Impact on Stratospheric Ozone Chemistry. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 5, Seiten 1257-1272. Copernicus Publications.
publishDate 2005
publisher Copernicus Publications
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spelling ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:10370 2025-06-15T14:08:55+00:00 Simulation of Stratospheric Water Vapor Trends: Impact on Stratospheric Ozone Chemistry Stenke, A. Grewe, V. 2005 application/pdf https://elib.dlr.de/10370/ en eng Copernicus Publications https://elib.dlr.de/10370/1/acp-5-1257-2005.pdf Stenke, A. und Grewe, V. (2005) Simulation of Stratospheric Water Vapor Trends: Impact on Stratospheric Ozone Chemistry. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 5, Seiten 1257-1272. Copernicus Publications. Institut für Physik der Atmosphäre Zeitschriftenbeitrag PeerReviewed 2005 ftdlr 2025-06-04T04:58:11Z A transient model simulation of the 40-year time period 1960 to 1999 with the coupled climate-chemistry model (CCM) ECHAM4.L39(DLR)/CHEM shows a stratospheric water vapor increase over the last two decades of 0.7 ppmv and, additionally, a short-term increase after major volcanic eruptions. Furthermore, a long-term decrease in global total ozone as well as a short-term ozone decline in the tropics after volcanic eruptions are modeled. In order to understand the resulting effects of the water vapor changes on lower stratospheric ozone chemistry, different perturbation simulations were performed with the CCM ECHAM4.L39- (DLR)/CHEM feeding the water vapor perturbations only to the chemistry part. Two different long-term perturbations of lower stratospheric water vapor, +1 ppmv and +5 ppmv, and a short-term perturbation of +2 ppmv with an e-folding time of two months were applied. An additional stratospheric water vapor amount of 1 ppmv results in a 5–10% OH increase in the tropical lower stratosphere between 100 and 30 hPa. As a direct consequence of the OH increase the ozone destruction by the HOx cycle becomes 6.4% more effective. Coupling processes between the HOx-family and the NOx/ClOxfamily also affect the ozone destruction by other catalytic reaction cycles. The NOx cycle becomes 1.6% less effective, whereas the effectiveness of the ClOx cycle is again slightly enhanced. A long-term water vapor increase does not only affect gas-phase chemistry, but also heterogeneous ozone chemistry in polar regions. The model results indicate an enhanced heterogeneous ozone depletion during antarctic spring due to a longer PSC existence period. In contrast, PSC formation in the northern hemisphere polar vortex and therefore heterogeneous ozone depletion during arctic spring are not affected by the water vapor increase, because of the less PSC activity. Finally, this study shows that 10% of the global total ozone decline in the transient model run can be explained by the modeled water vapor increase, but the simulated ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Arctic Unknown Antarctic Arctic
spellingShingle Institut für Physik der Atmosphäre
Stenke, A.
Grewe, V.
Simulation of Stratospheric Water Vapor Trends: Impact on Stratospheric Ozone Chemistry
title Simulation of Stratospheric Water Vapor Trends: Impact on Stratospheric Ozone Chemistry
title_full Simulation of Stratospheric Water Vapor Trends: Impact on Stratospheric Ozone Chemistry
title_fullStr Simulation of Stratospheric Water Vapor Trends: Impact on Stratospheric Ozone Chemistry
title_full_unstemmed Simulation of Stratospheric Water Vapor Trends: Impact on Stratospheric Ozone Chemistry
title_short Simulation of Stratospheric Water Vapor Trends: Impact on Stratospheric Ozone Chemistry
title_sort simulation of stratospheric water vapor trends: impact on stratospheric ozone chemistry
topic Institut für Physik der Atmosphäre
topic_facet Institut für Physik der Atmosphäre
url https://elib.dlr.de/10370/