Assessment of Upper Tropospheric and Stratospheric Water Vapor and Ozone in Reanalyses as Part of S-RIP
Reanalysis data sets are widely used to understand atmospheric processes and past variability, and are often used to stand in as observations for comparisons with climate model output. Because of the central role of water vapor (WV) and ozone (O3) in climate change, it is important to understand how...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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2017
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20170010178 |
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author | Nash, Eric R. Hegglin, Michaela I. Fujiwara, Masatomo Davis, Sean M. Dragani, Rossana Manney, Gloria L. Wargan, Krzysztof Kobayashi, Chiaki Potter, Gerald L. Wright, Jonathon S. Harada, Yayoi Long, Craig Wang, Tao Tegtmeier, Susann |
author_facet | Nash, Eric R. Hegglin, Michaela I. Fujiwara, Masatomo Davis, Sean M. Dragani, Rossana Manney, Gloria L. Wargan, Krzysztof Kobayashi, Chiaki Potter, Gerald L. Wright, Jonathon S. Harada, Yayoi Long, Craig Wang, Tao Tegtmeier, Susann |
author_sort | Nash, Eric R. |
collection | NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) |
description | Reanalysis data sets are widely used to understand atmospheric processes and past variability, and are often used to stand in as observations for comparisons with climate model output. Because of the central role of water vapor (WV) and ozone (O3) in climate change, it is important to understand how accurately and consistently these species are represented in existing global reanalyses. In this paper, we present the results of WV and O3 intercomparisons that have been performed as part of the SPARC (Stratosphere-troposphere Processes and their Role in Climate) Reanalysis Intercomparison Project (SRIP). The comparisons cover a range of timescales and evaluate both inter-reanalysis and observation-reanalysis differences. We also provide a systematic documentation of the treatment of WV and O3 in current reanalyses to aid future research and guide the interpretation of differences amongst reanalysis fields.The assimilation of total column ozone (TCO) observations in newer reanalyses results in realistic representations of TCO in reanalyses except when data coverage is lacking, such as during polar night. The vertical distribution of ozone is also relatively well represented in the stratosphere in reanalyses, particularly given the relatively weak constraints on ozone vertical structure provided by most assimilated observations and the simplistic representations of ozone photochemical processes in most of the reanalysis forecast models. However, significant biases in the vertical distribution of ozone are found in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere in all reanalyses.In contrast to O3, reanalysis estimates of stratospheric WV are not directly constrained by assimilated data. Observations of atmospheric humidity are typically used only in the troposphere, below a specified vertical level at or near the tropopause. The fidelity of reanalysis stratospheric WV products is therefore mainly dependent on the reanalyses representation of the physical drivers that influence stratospheric WV, such as temperatures in the tropical tropopause layer, methane oxidation, and the stratospheric overturning circulation. The lack of assimilated observations and known deficiencies in the representation of stratospheric transport in reanalyses result in much poorer agreement amongst observational and reanalysis estimates of stratospheric WV. Hence, stratospheric WV products from the current generation of reanalyses should generally not be used in scientific studies. |
format | Other/Unknown Material |
genre | polar night |
genre_facet | polar night |
id | ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:20170010178 |
institution | Open Polar |
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op_collection_id | ftnasantrs |
op_coverage | Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available |
op_relation | Document ID: 20170010178 http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20170010178 |
op_rights | Copyright, Public use permitted |
op_source | CASI |
publishDate | 2017 |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:20170010178 2025-01-17T00:23:06+00:00 Assessment of Upper Tropospheric and Stratospheric Water Vapor and Ozone in Reanalyses as Part of S-RIP Nash, Eric R. Hegglin, Michaela I. Fujiwara, Masatomo Davis, Sean M. Dragani, Rossana Manney, Gloria L. Wargan, Krzysztof Kobayashi, Chiaki Potter, Gerald L. Wright, Jonathon S. Harada, Yayoi Long, Craig Wang, Tao Tegtmeier, Susann Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available October 26, 2017 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20170010178 unknown Document ID: 20170010178 http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20170010178 Copyright, Public use permitted CASI Geophysics GSFC-E-DAA-TN46784 Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (ISSN 1680-7316) (e-ISSN 1680-7324); 17; 20; 12,743-12,778 2017 ftnasantrs 2019-07-20T23:24:55Z Reanalysis data sets are widely used to understand atmospheric processes and past variability, and are often used to stand in as observations for comparisons with climate model output. Because of the central role of water vapor (WV) and ozone (O3) in climate change, it is important to understand how accurately and consistently these species are represented in existing global reanalyses. In this paper, we present the results of WV and O3 intercomparisons that have been performed as part of the SPARC (Stratosphere-troposphere Processes and their Role in Climate) Reanalysis Intercomparison Project (SRIP). The comparisons cover a range of timescales and evaluate both inter-reanalysis and observation-reanalysis differences. We also provide a systematic documentation of the treatment of WV and O3 in current reanalyses to aid future research and guide the interpretation of differences amongst reanalysis fields.The assimilation of total column ozone (TCO) observations in newer reanalyses results in realistic representations of TCO in reanalyses except when data coverage is lacking, such as during polar night. The vertical distribution of ozone is also relatively well represented in the stratosphere in reanalyses, particularly given the relatively weak constraints on ozone vertical structure provided by most assimilated observations and the simplistic representations of ozone photochemical processes in most of the reanalysis forecast models. However, significant biases in the vertical distribution of ozone are found in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere in all reanalyses.In contrast to O3, reanalysis estimates of stratospheric WV are not directly constrained by assimilated data. Observations of atmospheric humidity are typically used only in the troposphere, below a specified vertical level at or near the tropopause. The fidelity of reanalysis stratospheric WV products is therefore mainly dependent on the reanalyses representation of the physical drivers that influence stratospheric WV, such as temperatures in the tropical tropopause layer, methane oxidation, and the stratospheric overturning circulation. The lack of assimilated observations and known deficiencies in the representation of stratospheric transport in reanalyses result in much poorer agreement amongst observational and reanalysis estimates of stratospheric WV. Hence, stratospheric WV products from the current generation of reanalyses should generally not be used in scientific studies. Other/Unknown Material polar night NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) |
spellingShingle | Geophysics Nash, Eric R. Hegglin, Michaela I. Fujiwara, Masatomo Davis, Sean M. Dragani, Rossana Manney, Gloria L. Wargan, Krzysztof Kobayashi, Chiaki Potter, Gerald L. Wright, Jonathon S. Harada, Yayoi Long, Craig Wang, Tao Tegtmeier, Susann Assessment of Upper Tropospheric and Stratospheric Water Vapor and Ozone in Reanalyses as Part of S-RIP |
title | Assessment of Upper Tropospheric and Stratospheric Water Vapor and Ozone in Reanalyses as Part of S-RIP |
title_full | Assessment of Upper Tropospheric and Stratospheric Water Vapor and Ozone in Reanalyses as Part of S-RIP |
title_fullStr | Assessment of Upper Tropospheric and Stratospheric Water Vapor and Ozone in Reanalyses as Part of S-RIP |
title_full_unstemmed | Assessment of Upper Tropospheric and Stratospheric Water Vapor and Ozone in Reanalyses as Part of S-RIP |
title_short | Assessment of Upper Tropospheric and Stratospheric Water Vapor and Ozone in Reanalyses as Part of S-RIP |
title_sort | assessment of upper tropospheric and stratospheric water vapor and ozone in reanalyses as part of s-rip |
topic | Geophysics |
topic_facet | Geophysics |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20170010178 |