Effect of solar proton events on the middle atmosphere during the past two solar cycles as computed using a two‐dimensional model
Author(s) -
Jackman Charles H.,
Douglass Anne R.,
Rood Richard B.,
McPeters Richard D.,
Meade Paul E.
Publication year - 1990
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/jd095id06p07417
Subject(s) - stratosphere , atmospheric sciences , ozone , atmosphere (unit) , middle latitudes , northern hemisphere , southern hemisphere , environmental science , latitude , proton , flux (metallurgy) , ozone depletion , ozone layer , climatology , physics , meteorology , geology , chemistry , astronomy , nuclear physics , organic chemistry
Daily average solar proton flux data for the years 1963–1984 (two solar cycles) have been used in a proton energy degradation scheme to derive ion pair production rates and, subsequently, HO x (H, OH, HO 2 ) and NO x (N, NO, NO 2 ) production rates. These HO x and NO x production rates are computed in a form suitable for inclusion in an atmospheric two‐dimensional time‐dependent photochemical model. The HO x increases, although large for certain solar proton events (SPEs), are relatively short‐lived because the HO x species have lifetimes of only hours in the middle atmosphere. For longer‐lived NO x species, increases are important for 2–4 months past the more intense SPEs but are generally negligible 6 months after the SPE. The only exception to this scenario was the gigantic August 1972 SPE, whose stratospheric effects lasted about a year past the event. Comparisons of model results with the ozone data from the Nimbus 4 backscattered ultraviolet (BUV) instrument indicate relatively good agreement in the time dependence and magnitude of the ozone depletion for the middle stratosphere between the model and measurements for the August 1972 SPE and for 2 months past the event. The model predictions for the August 1972 SPE indicate at most a 1% decrease in total ozone at the highest latitudes with a significant interhemispheric difference. The model predicts a larger middle latitude stratospheric ozone change in the southern than the northern hemisphere caused by the difference in seasons between the two hemispheres. The computed ozone decreases associated with the HO x and NO x increases are substantial in the upper stratosphere at high latitudes for only a few SPEs in the 22 years studied. A mechanism is presented for transport of NO y from the stratosphere to the ground, which may be involved in the enhancements in nitrate fluxes noticed in Antarctic deposition data. Our computations, however, indicate that the SPE contributions to these nitrate fluxes (even for the August 1972 SPE) are probably small.
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