Abstract
Heterogeneous halogen chemistry plays a dominant role in driving changes
in polar chemical composition and ozone depletion. Activation of
halogens outside the polar regions may result in depletion of local
ozone, along with changes in the chemical budgets of various species in
the lower stratosphere (LS). In this paper, both the means and
distributions of NO2 measurements from the Stratospheric
Aerosol and Gas Experiment III (SAGE3m) are compared to simulations from
a coupled climate-chemistry model, in order to better characterize and
quantify subpolar heterogeneous halogen chemistry. Observations of
NO2 from SAGE3m are found to be drawn from the same
distribution as the model simulation with heterogeneous chemistry, but
from a different distribution than the simulation without heterogeneous
chemistry. Results indicate that heterogeneous chemistry plays a
significant role in determining the chemical composition of the subpolar
LS and show how analysis of distribution functions can provide useful
insights to chemical processes.