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The mid‐latitude total ozone trends in the northern hemisphere
Author(s) -
Chandra S.,
Varotsos C.,
Flynn L. E.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
geophysical research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.007
H-Index - 273
eISSN - 1944-8007
pISSN - 0094-8276
DOI - 10.1029/96gl00305
Subject(s) - total ozone mapping spectrometer , climatology , latitude , environmental science , northern hemisphere , atmospheric sciences , ozone , middle latitudes , troposphere , southern hemisphere , satellite , stratosphere , atmosphere (unit) , tropospheric ozone , ozone layer , meteorology , geography , geology , geodesy , aerospace engineering , engineering
The total column ozone trends derived from satellite measurements at northern mid‐latitudes during winter and spring seasons appear to be significantly larger than predicted by recent 2‐D photochemical models. Analyses of 13 to 14 years of the Nimbus‐7 TOMS total ozone measurements suggest that satellite‐derived trends during winter and spring months are influenced by interannual variability associated with dynamical perturbations in the atmosphere. Such perturbations cause large longitudinal spread in total ozone trends at mid‐latitudes. For example, the decadal trends in column ozone during February over the 10° latitude band centered at 40° N vary from about −9% to about −4% with error bars of 4 to 6% at the 2σ level. During the same month the zonally averaged trend is about −6±3%. The trends in certain geographical regions or locations, such as the Mediterranean region (35° to 45°N, 0° to 30°E) and Athens, Greece (38°N, 24°E), track the seasonal trends derived from the zonally‐averaged data. Given the large uncertainties of the regional and local trends, such similarities may be fortuitous. By using the lower stratospheric and tropospheric temperatures as indices of dynamical variability in the ozone trend analysis, the total ozone trends are reduced by 1 to 3% per decade. For the winter months (December, January and February), the midlatitude trends (zonally averaged) are respectively −3.7±2.5 and −5.1±2.8 % per decade with and without using the lower stratospheric temperature as an index of dynamical variability.

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