Open Access
Three‐dimensional climatological distribution of tropospheric OH: Update and evaluation
Author(s) -
Spivakovsky C. M.,
Logan J. A.,
Montzka S. A.,
Balkanski Y. J.,
ForemanFowler M.,
Jones D. B. A.,
Horowitz L. W.,
Fusco A. C.,
Brenninkmeijer C. A. M.,
Prather M. J.,
Wofsy S. C.,
McElroy M. B.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/1999jd901006
Subject(s) - troposphere , atmospheric sciences , latitude , mixing ratio , environmental science , climatology , atmospheric chemistry , mean value , chemistry , ozone , meteorology , physics , geology , mathematics , statistics , astronomy
A global climatological distribution of tropospheric OH is computed using observed distributions of O 3 , H 2 O, NO t (NO 2 +NO + 2N 2 O 5 + NO 3 + HNO 2 +HNO 4 ), CO, hydrocarbons, temperature, and cloud optical depth. Global annual mean OH is 1.16×10 6 molecules cm −3 (integrated with respect to mass of air up to 100 hPa within ±32° latitude and up to 200 hPa outside that region). Mean hemispheric concentrations of OH are nearly equal. While global mean OH increased by 33% compared to that from Spivakovsky et al. [1990], mean loss frequencies of CH 3 CCl 3 and CH 4 increased by only 23% because a lower fraction of total OH resides in the lower troposphere in the present distribution. The value for temperature used for determining lifetimes of hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) by scaling rate constants [ Prather and Spivakovsky , 1990] is revised from 277 K to 272 K. The present distribution of OH is consistent within a few percent with the current budgets of CH 3 CCl 3 and HCFC‐22. For CH 3 CCl 3 , it results in a lifetime of 4.6 years, including stratospheric and ocean sinks with atmospheric lifetimes of 43 and 80 years, respectively. For HCFC‐22, the lifetime is 11.4 years, allowing for the stratospheric sink with an atmospheric lifetime of 229 years. Corrections suggested by observed levels of CH 2 Cl 2 (annual means) depend strongly on the rate of interhemispheric mixing in the model. An increase in OH in the Northern Hemisphere by 20% combined with a decrease in the southern tropics by 25% is suggested if this rate is at its upper limit consistent with observations of CFCs and 85 Kr. For the lower limit, observations of CH 2 Cl 2 imply an increase in OH in the Northern Hemisphere by 35% combined with a decrease in OH in the southern tropics by 60%. However, such large corrections are inconsistent with observations for 14 CO in the tropics and for the interhemispheric gradient of CH 3 CCl 3 . Industrial sources of CH 2 Cl 2 are sufficient for balancing its budget. The available tests do not establish significant errors in OH except for a possible underestimate in winter in the northern and southern tropics by 15–20% and 10–15%, respectively, and an overestimate in southern extratropics by ∼25%. Observations of seasonal variations of CH 3 CCl 3 , CH 2 Cl 2 , 14 CO, and C 2 H 6 offer no evidence for higher levels of OH in the southern than in the northern extratropics. It is expected that in the next few years the latitudinal distribution and annual cycle of CH 3 CCl 3 will be determined primarily by its loss frequency, allowing for additional constraints for OH on scales smaller than global.