Science Update: Influence of major sudden stratospheric warmings and elevated stratopause events on the effects of energetic particle precipitation

Using the WACCM chemistry-climate model, L.A. Holt and co-authors investigate the effect of major sudden stratospheric warmings (SSWs) and elevated-stratopause events (ES) on the transport of NOx produced by energetic particle precipitation (EPP) during the Northern Hemisphere winter. The model simulations indicate large increases in NOx following SSW and ES events, which are attributed to an increase in the descending branch of the residual circulation (w*) following an event. Interestingly, the earlier and event occurs in winter, the more NOx descends into the stratosphere. The full abstract can be found here.

Science Update: The SPARC Data Initiative: A comparison of ozone climatologies from international satellite limb sounders

As part of the SPARC Data Initiative, S. Tegtmeier and co-authors present some of the main findings from the comparison of ozone climatologies from satellite limb sounders in a new JGR article. The ozone climatologies cover altitudes from the upper troposphere to the lower mesosphere and are obtained from a host of instruments over the period 1978-2010 (LIMS, SAGE I, SAGE II, UARS-MLS, HALOE, POAM II, POAM III, SMR, OSIRIS, SAGE III, MIPAS, GOMOS, SCIAMACHY, ACE-FTS, ACE-MAESTRO, Aura-MLS, HIRDLS, and SMILES). The inter-comparisons focus on mean biases based on monthly and annual zonal mean fields, on inter-annual variability and on seasonal cycles. Their results indicate that uncertainty in terms of the mean state of ozone is lowest in the tropical middle stratosphere and in the mid-latitude lower and middle stratosphere, where the instrument spread is less than ±5%. Large differences between data sets exist in the tropical lower stratosphere and in the high latitudes, where instrument spread is ±30% and ±15%, respectively. The evaluations provide a very useful guidance tool for choice of reliable data sets for different applications. The full abstract can be found here.

Science Update: Quantifying the role of orographic gravity waves on polar stratospheric cloud occurrence in the Antarctic and the Arctic

S. P. Alexander and co-authors quantify the proportion of polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) due to orographic wave forcing in a recent JGR article. Looking at data from four winter seasons for both the Antarctic and Arctic they show that in the regions downstream of mountain ranges more than 75% of water ice PSCs and around 50% of a high number density liquid nitric acid trihydrate mixture class result from orographic wave activity. In the synoptically warmer Arctic 12% of all PSCs are attributed to orographic wave forcing, while for the Antarctic this proportion is much lower (5%). The full abstract can be found here.

Science Update: 2001-2010 stratospheric ozone changes: the small role of solar flux variations

In a recent ACP article, S.S. Dhomse and co authors use a chemical transport model (CTM) to show that the stratospheric and lower mesospheric ozone changes during solar cycle 23 (1996-2008) can be reproduced using several different solar spectral flux datasets (SORCE, SSI, SATIRE-S). Model results agree well with both MLS and SABER observations regardless of the solar flux data set used, suggesting that the UV variations detected by SORCE are not necessary to reproduce observed stratospheric ozone changes from 2001-2010 in a CTM. The full abstract can be found here.

Science update: Microphysical modelling of Arctic stratospheric dehydration

As part of the RECONCILE campaign, microphysical modelling of the 2009/2010 Arctic winter campaigns was carried out by I. Engel and co-authors in a new ACPD article. They show that including newly developed NAT (Nitric Acid Trihydrate) and ice nucleation parameterisations as well as small-scale temperature fluctuations are vital to reproducing the observed signals of redistribution of water vapour in the Arctic stratosphere under the extremely cold conditions of the 2009/2010 winter. The full abstract can be found here.