Evaluating the Model Representation of Asian Summer Monsoon UTLS
Transport and Composition using Airborne In Situ Observations
Abstract
Chemistry transport models (CTMs) are essential tools for characterizing
and predicting the role of atmospheric composition and chemistry in
Earth’s climate system. This study demonstrates the use of airborne in
situ observations to diagnose the representation of atmospheric
composition by global CTMs. Process-based diagnostics are developed
which minimize the spatial and temporal sampling differences between
airborne in situ measurements and CTM grid points. The developed
diagnostics make use of dynamical and chemical vertical coordinates as a
means of highlighting areas where focused model improvement is needed.
The chosen process is the chemical impact of the Asian summer monsoon
(ASM), where deep convection serves a unique pathway for rapid transport
of surface emissions and pollutants to the stratosphere. Two global CTM
configurations are examined for their representation of the ASM upper
troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS), using airborne observations
collected over south Asia. Application of the developed diagnostics to
the CTMs reveals the limitations of zonally-averaged surface boundary
conditions for species with sufficiently short tropospheric lifetimes,
and that species whose stratospheric loss rates are dominated by
photolysis have excellent agreement compared to that observed. Overall,
the diagnostics demonstrate the strength of airborne observations toward
improving model predictions, and highlight the utility of
highly-resolved CTMs to improve the understanding of reactive transport
of anthropogenic pollutants to the stratosphere.