A Lagrangian transport core for the simulation of stratospheric trace species in a Chemistry Climate Model

Lagrangian transport schemes have proven to be useful tools for modelling stratospherictrace gas transport since they are less diusive than classical Eulerian schemesand therefore especially well suited for maintaining steep tracer gradients as observedin the atmosphere. Here, the implementation of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hoppe, Charlotte Marinke
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH Zentralbibliothek, Verlag 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/156285
https://juser.fz-juelich.de/search?p=id:%22FZJ-2014-05076%22
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Summary:Lagrangian transport schemes have proven to be useful tools for modelling stratospherictrace gas transport since they are less diusive than classical Eulerian schemesand therefore especially well suited for maintaining steep tracer gradients as observedin the atmosphere. Here, the implementation of the full-Lagrangian transportcore of the Chemical Lagrangian Model of the Stratosphere (CLaMS) in the ECHAM/MESSy Atmospheric Chemistry model (EMAC) is presented. A ten-year time-slice simulation was performed to evaluate the coupled model system EMAC/CLaMS. Simulated zonal mean age of air distributions were compared to the age of air derived from airborne measurements, showing the expected characteristicsof the stratospheric circulation. Climatologies of long-lived tracers (CFC-11(CCl$_{3}$F), CFC-12 (CCl$_{2}$F$_{2}$), CH$_{4}$, N$_{2}$O) were calculated using the standard ux-formsemi-Lagrangian transport scheme (FFSL) in EMAC, as well as the new CLaMS Lagrangian transport scheme. The climatologies were compared both to each other and also to satellite measurements of trace gases. The dierences in the resulting tracer distributions are most pronounced in the regions of strong transport barriers, namely the edge of the tropical pipe, the tropopause, and the edge of the polarvortex. These regions were analysed in detail and show improved results using the Lagrangian transport scheme, with stronger gradients at the respective transport barriers. The analyses of various trace gases and age of air in the polar vortex regions shows that the CLaMS Lagrangian transport scheme produces a stronger, more realistic transport barrier at the edge of the polar vortex than the FFSL transportscheme of EMAC. Differences in simulated age of air are in the range of up to one year in the Arctic polar vortex in late winter/early spring. The newly coupled model system EMAC/CLaMS thus constitutes a suitable tool for future model studies, e.g. for the simulation of polar ozone depletion, based on a sophisticated stratospheric tracer ...