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Changes in Anthropogenic Precursor Emissions Drive Shifts in the Ozone Seasonal Cycle Throughout the Northern Midlatitude TroposphereSimulations by six Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) Earth system models indicate that the seasonal cycle of baseline tropospheric ozone at northern midlatitudes has been shifting since the mid-20th century. Beginning in ∼ 1940, the magnitude of the seasonal cycle increased by ∼10 ppb (measured from seasonal minimum to maximum), and the seasonal maximum shifted to later in the year by about 3 weeks. This shift maximized in the mid-1980s, followed by a reversal – the seasonal cycle decreased in amplitude and the maximum shifted back to earlier in the year. Similar changes are seen in measurements collected from the 1970s to the present. The timing of the seasonal cycle changes is generally concurrent with the rise and fall of anthropogenic emissions that followed industrialization and the subsequent implementation of air quality emission controls. A quantitative comparison of the temporal changes in the ozone seasonal cycle at sites in both Europe and North America with the temporal changes in ozone precursor emissions across the northern midlatitudes found a high degree of similarity between these two temporal patterns. We hypothesize that changing precursor emissions are responsible for the shift in the ozone seasonal cycle; this is supported by the absence of such seasonal shifts in southern midlatitudes where anthropogenic emissions are much smaller. We also suggest a mechanism by which changing emissions drive the changing seasonal cycle: increasing emissions of NOx allow summertime photochemical production of ozone to become more important than ozone transported from the stratosphere, and increasing volatile organic compounds (VOCs) lead to progressively greater photochemical ozone production in the summer months, thereby increasing the amplitude of the seasonal ozone cycle. Decreasing emissions of both precursor classes then reverse these changes. The quantitative parameter values that characterize the seasonal shifts provide useful benchmarks for evaluating model simulations, both against observations and between models.
Document ID
20220004426
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Henry Bowman
(Carleton College Northfield, Minnesota, United States)
Steven T. Turnock ORCID
(Met Office Hadley Centre)
Susanne E Bauer
(Goddard Institute for Space Studies New York, New York, United States)
Konstantinos Tsigaridis
(Columbia University New York, New York, United States)
Makoto Deushi ORCID
(Japan Meteorological Agency Tokyo, Japan)
Naga Oshima ORCID
(Japan Meteorological Agency Tokyo, Japan)
Fiona M O'Connor ORCID
(Met Office Exeter, United Kingdom)
Larry Horowitz
(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States)
Tongwen Wu ORCID
(China Meteorological Administration Beijing, China)
Jie Zhang
(China Meteorological Administration Beijing, China)
Dagmar Kubistin ORCID
(German Meteorological Service Offenbach, Germany)
David D Parrish
(David D. Parrish LLC)
Date Acquired
March 16, 2022
Publication Date
March 16, 2022
Publication Information
Publication: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Publisher: European Geosciences Union
Volume: 22
Issue: 5
ISSN: 1680-7316
e-ISSN: 1680-7324
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 509496.02.08.04.24
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC20M0282
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
Ozone
troposphere
temporal variability
time scales
climate model simulations
northern midlatitude ozone seasonal cycle
Anthropogenic Precursor Emissions
Ozone Seasonal Cycle
Northern Midlatitude Troposphere
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