Refinements in the use of equivalent latitude for assimilating sporadic inhomogeneous stratospheric tracer observations, 1: Detecting transport of Pinatubo aerosol across a strong vortex edge

International audience The use of PV equivalent latitude for assimilating stratospheric tracer observations is discussed - with particular regard to the errors in the equivalent latitude coordinate, and to the assimilation of sparse data. Some example measurements are assimilated: they sample the st...

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Main Authors: Good, P., Pyle, J.
Other Authors: Institute for Environmental Research and Sustainable Development (IERSD), National Observatory of Athens (NOA), Centre for Atmospheric Science Cambridge, UK, University of Cambridge UK (CAM)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.science/hal-00295504
https://hal.science/hal-00295504/document
https://hal.science/hal-00295504/file/acp-4-1823-2004.pdf
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spelling ftinsu:oai:HAL:hal-00295504v1 2023-11-12T04:13:49+01:00 Refinements in the use of equivalent latitude for assimilating sporadic inhomogeneous stratospheric tracer observations, 1: Detecting transport of Pinatubo aerosol across a strong vortex edge Good, P. Pyle, J. Institute for Environmental Research and Sustainable Development (IERSD) National Observatory of Athens (NOA) Centre for Atmospheric Science Cambridge, UK University of Cambridge UK (CAM) 2004-09-13 https://hal.science/hal-00295504 https://hal.science/hal-00295504/document https://hal.science/hal-00295504/file/acp-4-1823-2004.pdf en eng HAL CCSD European Geosciences Union hal-00295504 https://hal.science/hal-00295504 https://hal.science/hal-00295504/document https://hal.science/hal-00295504/file/acp-4-1823-2004.pdf info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess ISSN: 1680-7316 EISSN: 1680-7324 Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics https://hal.science/hal-00295504 Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 2004, 4 (7), pp.1823-1836 [SDU.OCEAN]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean Atmosphere info:eu-repo/semantics/article Journal articles 2004 ftinsu 2023-10-25T16:30:05Z International audience The use of PV equivalent latitude for assimilating stratospheric tracer observations is discussed - with particular regard to the errors in the equivalent latitude coordinate, and to the assimilation of sparse data. Some example measurements are assimilated: they sample the stratosphere sporadically and inhomogeneously. The aim was to obtain precise information about the isentropic tracer distribution and evolution as a function of equivalent latitude. Precision is important, if transport across barriers like the vortex edge are to be detected directly. The main challenges addressed are the errors in modelled equivalent latitude, and the non-ideal observational sampling. The methods presented allow first some assessment of equivalent latitude errors and a picture of how good or poor the observational coverage is. This information determines choices in the approach for estimating as precisely as possible the true equivalent latitude distribution of the tracer, in periods of good and poor observational coverage. This is in practice an optimisation process, since better understanding of the equivalent latitude distribution of the tracer feeds back into a clearer picture of the errors in the modelled equivalent latitude coordinate. Error estimates constrain the reliability of using equivalent latitude to make statements like "this observation samples air poleward of the vortex edge" or that of more general model-measurement comparisons. The approach is demonstrated for ground-based lidar soundings of the Mount Pinatubo aerosol cloud, focusing on the 1991-92 arctic vortex edge between 475-520K. Equivalent latitude is estimated at the observation times and locations from Eulerian model tracers initialised with PV and forced by UK Meteorological Office analyses. With the model formulation chosen, it is shown that tracer transport of a few days resulted in an error distribution that was much closer to Gaussian form, although the mean error was not significantly affected. The analysis of the ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Institut national des sciences de l'Univers: HAL-INSU Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Institut national des sciences de l'Univers: HAL-INSU
op_collection_id ftinsu
language English
topic [SDU.OCEAN]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean
Atmosphere
spellingShingle [SDU.OCEAN]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean
Atmosphere
Good, P.
Pyle, J.
Refinements in the use of equivalent latitude for assimilating sporadic inhomogeneous stratospheric tracer observations, 1: Detecting transport of Pinatubo aerosol across a strong vortex edge
topic_facet [SDU.OCEAN]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean
Atmosphere
description International audience The use of PV equivalent latitude for assimilating stratospheric tracer observations is discussed - with particular regard to the errors in the equivalent latitude coordinate, and to the assimilation of sparse data. Some example measurements are assimilated: they sample the stratosphere sporadically and inhomogeneously. The aim was to obtain precise information about the isentropic tracer distribution and evolution as a function of equivalent latitude. Precision is important, if transport across barriers like the vortex edge are to be detected directly. The main challenges addressed are the errors in modelled equivalent latitude, and the non-ideal observational sampling. The methods presented allow first some assessment of equivalent latitude errors and a picture of how good or poor the observational coverage is. This information determines choices in the approach for estimating as precisely as possible the true equivalent latitude distribution of the tracer, in periods of good and poor observational coverage. This is in practice an optimisation process, since better understanding of the equivalent latitude distribution of the tracer feeds back into a clearer picture of the errors in the modelled equivalent latitude coordinate. Error estimates constrain the reliability of using equivalent latitude to make statements like "this observation samples air poleward of the vortex edge" or that of more general model-measurement comparisons. The approach is demonstrated for ground-based lidar soundings of the Mount Pinatubo aerosol cloud, focusing on the 1991-92 arctic vortex edge between 475-520K. Equivalent latitude is estimated at the observation times and locations from Eulerian model tracers initialised with PV and forced by UK Meteorological Office analyses. With the model formulation chosen, it is shown that tracer transport of a few days resulted in an error distribution that was much closer to Gaussian form, although the mean error was not significantly affected. The analysis of the ...
author2 Institute for Environmental Research and Sustainable Development (IERSD)
National Observatory of Athens (NOA)
Centre for Atmospheric Science Cambridge, UK
University of Cambridge UK (CAM)
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Good, P.
Pyle, J.
author_facet Good, P.
Pyle, J.
author_sort Good, P.
title Refinements in the use of equivalent latitude for assimilating sporadic inhomogeneous stratospheric tracer observations, 1: Detecting transport of Pinatubo aerosol across a strong vortex edge
title_short Refinements in the use of equivalent latitude for assimilating sporadic inhomogeneous stratospheric tracer observations, 1: Detecting transport of Pinatubo aerosol across a strong vortex edge
title_full Refinements in the use of equivalent latitude for assimilating sporadic inhomogeneous stratospheric tracer observations, 1: Detecting transport of Pinatubo aerosol across a strong vortex edge
title_fullStr Refinements in the use of equivalent latitude for assimilating sporadic inhomogeneous stratospheric tracer observations, 1: Detecting transport of Pinatubo aerosol across a strong vortex edge
title_full_unstemmed Refinements in the use of equivalent latitude for assimilating sporadic inhomogeneous stratospheric tracer observations, 1: Detecting transport of Pinatubo aerosol across a strong vortex edge
title_sort refinements in the use of equivalent latitude for assimilating sporadic inhomogeneous stratospheric tracer observations, 1: detecting transport of pinatubo aerosol across a strong vortex edge
publisher HAL CCSD
publishDate 2004
url https://hal.science/hal-00295504
https://hal.science/hal-00295504/document
https://hal.science/hal-00295504/file/acp-4-1823-2004.pdf
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source ISSN: 1680-7316
EISSN: 1680-7324
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
https://hal.science/hal-00295504
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 2004, 4 (7), pp.1823-1836
op_relation hal-00295504
https://hal.science/hal-00295504
https://hal.science/hal-00295504/document
https://hal.science/hal-00295504/file/acp-4-1823-2004.pdf
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
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