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The effect of zonal asymmetries in the Brewer‐Dobson circulation on ozone and water vapor distributions in the northern middle atmosphere
Author(s) -
Demirhan Bari D.,
Gabriel A.,
Körnich H.,
Peters D. W. H.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1029/2012jd017709
Subject(s) - stratosphere , climatology , atmospheric sciences , polar vortex , downwelling , atmosphere (unit) , zonal flow (plasma) , atmospheric circulation , stratopause , residual , quasi biennial oscillation , advection , geology , middle latitudes , circulation (fluid dynamics) , environmental science , meteorology , mesosphere , geography , physics , upwelling , oceanography , plasma , algorithm , quantum mechanics , computer science , tokamak , thermodynamics
The longitudinal variations in the time‐mean transport by the Brewer‐Dobson circulation are studied using a three‐dimensional (3‐D) residual circulation approach to analyze the effects on zonal asymmetries in stratospheric ozone (O 3 ) and middle atmospheric water vapor (H 2 O). For January, the monthly mean residual winds, including both the Eulerian flow and the eddy‐induced time‐mean flow, were derived from general circulation model simulations with interactive chemistry (HAMMONIA), reanalysis (ERA‐Interim), and satellite data (Aura/MLS). Extending the picture of the zonal mean two‐dimensional Brewer‐Dobson circulation, we find a 3‐D circulation structure in relation to the zonal wave one in the middle atmosphere, including northward and downward residual winds over northern Europe/Asia with the downwelling directed toward the center of the polar vortex over northern Siberia, as well as southward and upward residual winds over the northern Pacific/Aleutians, and a pronounced cross‐polar transport from Asia to North America in the middle stratosphere. The residual advection of O 3 and H 2 O shows that the observed wave one patterns in O 3 and H 2 O are produced by the zonal asymmetries in the residual mass transport in which Eulerian and eddy time‐mean transports are largely counteracting. In comparison to observations, the model underestimates the effects of planetary waves but overestimates those of transient waves in configuring the stationary waves in O 3 and H 2 O. Overall, the 3‐D residual circulation approach provides a useful diagnostic for understanding regional differences in middle atmospheric trace gas distributions and for validating general circulation models with interactive chemistry.

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