loading page

Evaluating the Model Representation of Asian Summer Monsoon UTLS Transport and Composition using Airborne In Situ Observations
  • +15
  • Warren P Smith,
  • Laura L Pan,
  • Douglas Edward Kinnison,
  • Elliot L. Atlas,
  • Shawn Honomichl,
  • Jun Zhang,
  • Simone Tilmes,
  • Rafael Pedro Fernandez,
  • Alfonso Saiz-Lopez,
  • Victoria Treadaway,
  • Karina E Adcock,
  • Johannes C. Laube,
  • M. von Hobe,
  • Corinna Kloss,
  • Silvia Viciani,
  • Francesco D'Amato,
  • C. Michael Volk,
  • Fabrizio Ravegnani
Warren P Smith
NCAR

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

Author Profile
Laura L Pan
National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)
Author Profile
Douglas Edward Kinnison
NCAR/CLAS
Author Profile
Elliot L. Atlas
RSMAS
Author Profile
Shawn Honomichl
National Center for Atmospheric Research
Author Profile
Jun Zhang
National Center for Atmospheric Research
Author Profile
Simone Tilmes
National Center for Atmospheric Research (UCAR)
Author Profile
Rafael Pedro Fernandez
National Research Council (CONICET)
Author Profile
Alfonso Saiz-Lopez
Spanish National Research Council (CSIC)
Author Profile
Victoria Treadaway
Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences
Author Profile
Karina E Adcock
University of East Anglia
Author Profile
Johannes C. Laube
Forschungszentrum Juelich GmbH
Author Profile
M. von Hobe
Forschungszentrum Juelich
Author Profile
Corinna Kloss
Forschungszentrum Juelich
Author Profile
Silvia Viciani
CNR-INO National Institute of Optics
Author Profile
Francesco D'Amato
CNR - Istituto Nazionale di Ottica
Author Profile
C. Michael Volk
University of Wuppertal
Author Profile
Fabrizio Ravegnani
CNR
Author Profile

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.
03 Aug 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
04 Aug 2023Published in ESS Open Archive