TY - JOUR
T1 - The representation of solar cycle signals in stratospheric ozone - Part 2
T2 - Analysis of global models
AU - Maycock, Amanda C.
AU - Matthes, Katja
AU - Tegtmeier, Susann
AU - Schmidt, Hauke
AU - Thiéblemont, Rémi
AU - Hood, Lon
AU - Akiyoshi, Hideharu
AU - Bekki, Slimane
AU - Deushi, Makoto
AU - Jöckel, Patrick
AU - Kirner, Oliver
AU - Kunze, Markus
AU - Marchand, Marion
AU - Marsh, Daniel R.
AU - Michou, Martine
AU - Plummer, David
AU - Revell, Laura E.
AU - Rozanov, Eugene
AU - Stenke, Andrea
AU - Yamashita, Yousuke
AU - Yoshida, Kohei
N1 - Funding Information:
Amanda C. Maycock acknowledges funding from an AXA Postdoctoral Fellowship, the ERC ACCI Grant project no. 267760 and a NERC Independent Research Fellowship (NE/M018199/1). Amanda C. Maycock also acknowledges funding from the COST Action ES1005 "Towards a more complete assessment of the impact of solar variability on the Earth's climate" (TOSCA) for a Short-Term Scientific Mission to GEOMAR in September 2014, which initiated this work. We are grateful to support for scientific meetings from the WCRP/SPARC SOLARIS-HEPPA activity. Parts of the work at the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel were performed within the Helmholtz University Young Investigators Group NATHAN, funded by the Helmholtz Association and GEOMAR. Hiderahu Akiyoshi acknowledges the Environment Research and Technology Development Fund of the Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency, Japan (2-1709), and NECSX9/A(ECO) computers at CGER, NIES. The National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) is sponsored by the US National Science Foundation (NSF). WACCM is a component of the Community Earth System Model (CESM), which is supported by NSF and the Office of Science of the US Department of Energy. The EMAC simulations have been performed at the German Climate Computing Centre (DKRZ) through support from the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF). DKRZ and its scientific steering committee are gratefully acknowledged for providing the HPC and data archiving resources for the consortial project ESCiMo (Earth System Chemistry integrated Modelling). The SOCOL team acknowledges support from the Swiss National Science Foundation under grant agreement CRSII2-147659 (FUPSOL II). Rémi Thiéblemont acknowledges his funding by the LABEX L-IPSL project (grant ANR-10-LABX-18-01). Slimane Bekki has been partially supported by the European project StratoClim (603557 under programme FP7-ENV.2013.6.1-2).We acknowledge the modelling groups for making their simulations available for this analysis, the joint WCRP SPARC/IGAC Chemistry-Climate Model Initiative (CCMI) for organizing and coordinating the model data analysis activity and the British Atmospheric Data Centre (BADC) for collecting and archiving the CCMI model output. We are grateful to Greg Bodeker (Bodeker Scientific) and Birgit Hassler (NOAA) for providing the combined vertical ozone profile database from Bodeker et al. (2013).
Publisher Copyright:
© Author(s) 2018.
PY - 2018/8/13
Y1 - 2018/8/13
N2 - The impact of changes in incoming solar irradiance on stratospheric ozone abundances should be included in climate simulations to aid in capturing the atmospheric response to solar cycle variability. This study presents the first systematic comparison of the representation of the 11-year solar cycle ozone response (SOR) in chemistry-climate models (CCMs) and in pre-calculated ozone databases specified in climate models that do not include chemistry, with a special focus on comparing the recommended protocols for the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 and Phase 6 (CMIP5 and CMIP6). We analyse the SOR in eight CCMs from the Chemistry-Climate Model Initiative (CCMI-1) and compare these with results from three ozone databases for climate models: the Bodeker Scientific ozone database, the SPARC/Atmospheric Chemistry and Climate (AC&C) ozone database for CMIP5 and the SPARC/CCMI ozone database for CMIP6. The peak amplitude of the annual mean SOR in the tropical upper stratosphere (1-5 hPa) decreases by more than a factor of 2, from around 5 to 2 %, between the CMIP5 and CMIP6 ozone databases. This substantial decrease can be traced to the CMIP5 ozone database being constructed from a regression model fit to satellite and ozonesonde measurements, while the CMIP6 database is constructed from CCM simulations. The SOR in the CMIP6 ozone database therefore implicitly resembles the SOR in the CCMI-1 models. The structure in latitude of the SOR in the CMIP6 ozone database and CCMI-1 models is considerably smoother than in the CMIP5 database, which shows unrealistic sharp gradients in the SOR across the middle latitudes owing to the paucity of long-term ozone measurements in polar regions. The SORs in the CMIP6 ozone database and the CCMI-1 models show a seasonal dependence with enhanced meridional gradients at mid- to high latitudes in the winter hemisphere. The CMIP5 ozone database does not account for seasonal variations in the SOR, which is unrealistic. Sensitivity experiments with a global atmospheric model without chemistry (ECHAM6.3) are performed to assess the atmospheric impacts of changes in the representation of the SOR and solar spectral irradiance (SSI) forcing between CMIP5 and CMIP6. The larger amplitude of the SOR in the CMIP5 ozone database compared to CMIP6 causes a likely overestimation of the modelled tropical stratospheric temperature response between 11-year solar cycle minimum and maximum by up to 0.55 K, or around 80% of the total amplitude. This effect is substantially larger than the change in temperature response due to differences in SSI forcing between CMIP5 and CMIP6. The results emphasize the importance of adequately representing the SOR in global models to capture the impact of the 11-year solar cycle on the atmosphere. Since a number of limitations in the representation of the SOR in the CMIP5 ozone database have been identified, we recommend that CMIP6 models without chemistry use the CMIP6 ozone database and the CMIP6 SSI dataset to better capture the climate impacts of solar variability. The SOR coefficients from the CMIP6 ozone database are published with this paper.
AB - The impact of changes in incoming solar irradiance on stratospheric ozone abundances should be included in climate simulations to aid in capturing the atmospheric response to solar cycle variability. This study presents the first systematic comparison of the representation of the 11-year solar cycle ozone response (SOR) in chemistry-climate models (CCMs) and in pre-calculated ozone databases specified in climate models that do not include chemistry, with a special focus on comparing the recommended protocols for the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 and Phase 6 (CMIP5 and CMIP6). We analyse the SOR in eight CCMs from the Chemistry-Climate Model Initiative (CCMI-1) and compare these with results from three ozone databases for climate models: the Bodeker Scientific ozone database, the SPARC/Atmospheric Chemistry and Climate (AC&C) ozone database for CMIP5 and the SPARC/CCMI ozone database for CMIP6. The peak amplitude of the annual mean SOR in the tropical upper stratosphere (1-5 hPa) decreases by more than a factor of 2, from around 5 to 2 %, between the CMIP5 and CMIP6 ozone databases. This substantial decrease can be traced to the CMIP5 ozone database being constructed from a regression model fit to satellite and ozonesonde measurements, while the CMIP6 database is constructed from CCM simulations. The SOR in the CMIP6 ozone database therefore implicitly resembles the SOR in the CCMI-1 models. The structure in latitude of the SOR in the CMIP6 ozone database and CCMI-1 models is considerably smoother than in the CMIP5 database, which shows unrealistic sharp gradients in the SOR across the middle latitudes owing to the paucity of long-term ozone measurements in polar regions. The SORs in the CMIP6 ozone database and the CCMI-1 models show a seasonal dependence with enhanced meridional gradients at mid- to high latitudes in the winter hemisphere. The CMIP5 ozone database does not account for seasonal variations in the SOR, which is unrealistic. Sensitivity experiments with a global atmospheric model without chemistry (ECHAM6.3) are performed to assess the atmospheric impacts of changes in the representation of the SOR and solar spectral irradiance (SSI) forcing between CMIP5 and CMIP6. The larger amplitude of the SOR in the CMIP5 ozone database compared to CMIP6 causes a likely overestimation of the modelled tropical stratospheric temperature response between 11-year solar cycle minimum and maximum by up to 0.55 K, or around 80% of the total amplitude. This effect is substantially larger than the change in temperature response due to differences in SSI forcing between CMIP5 and CMIP6. The results emphasize the importance of adequately representing the SOR in global models to capture the impact of the 11-year solar cycle on the atmosphere. Since a number of limitations in the representation of the SOR in the CMIP5 ozone database have been identified, we recommend that CMIP6 models without chemistry use the CMIP6 ozone database and the CMIP6 SSI dataset to better capture the climate impacts of solar variability. The SOR coefficients from the CMIP6 ozone database are published with this paper.
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U2 - 10.5194/acp-18-11323-2018
DO - 10.5194/acp-18-11323-2018
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85051503137
SN - 1680-7316
VL - 18
SP - 11323
EP - 11343
JO - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
JF - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
IS - 15
ER -