Zonal Similarity of Long-Term Changes and Seasonal Cycles of Baseline Ozone at Northern Midlatitudes

被引:26
作者
Parrish, David D. [1 ,2 ]
Derwent, Richard G. [3 ]
Steinbrecht, Wolfgang [4 ]
Stuebi, Rene [5 ]
Van Malderen, Roeland [6 ]
Steinbacher, Martin [7 ]
Trickl, Thomas [8 ]
Ries, Ludwig [9 ]
Xu, Xiaobin [10 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Davis, Air Qual Res Ctr, Davis, CA 95616 USA
[2] David D Parrish LLC, Boulder, CO 80304 USA
[3] Rdscientific, Newbury, Berks, England
[4] Deutsch Wetterdienst, Hohenpeissenberg, Germany
[5] Fed Off Meteorol & Climatol MeteoSwiss, Payerne, Switzerland
[6] Uccle Brussels, Royal Meteorol Inst Belgium, Brussels, Belgium
[7] Empa, Swiss Fed Labs Mat Sci & Technol, Dubendorf, Switzerland
[8] Karlsruher Inst Technol, Garmisch Partenkirchen, Germany
[9] UBA, Platform Zugspitze, GAW Global Observ Zugspitze Hohenpeissenberg, Dessau Rosslau, Germany
[10] Chinese Acad Meteorol Sci, Key Lab Atmospher Chem, China Meteorol Adm, Beijing, Peoples R China
关键词
baseline ozone; long-term changes; seasonal cycle; zonal similarity; ozone maximum; RISING ASIAN EMISSIONS; WALIGUAN GAW STATION; SURFACE OZONE; TROPOSPHERIC OZONE; MACE-HEAD; PART; TRENDS; CHEMISTRY; AMERICA; PERIOD;
D O I
10.1029/2019JD031908
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
The lifetime of ozone in the troposphere is approximately 3 weeks. Prevailing westerly winds at northern midlatitudes can transport air around the globe in that time. Hence, within these latitudes zonal similarity is expected in long-term changes and seasonal cycles of concentrations of baseline ozone. We quantify the degree of zonal similarity by examining eight in situ baseline ozone data sets near the west coasts of North America and Europe, that is, upwind of those continents and downwind of the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, where the impacts of local and regional ozone sources have been largely mixed into the troposphere, giving the best-defined baseline ozone signature. Zonal similarity is found in both long-term changes and seasonal cycles. The decades-long increase in Northern Hemisphere, midlatitude baseline mixing ratios (average similar to 0.60 ppb year(-1)from 1980-2000), has ended, with a maximum reached in the mid-2000s, followed by slow decrease (average = -0.09 +/- 0.08 ppb year(-1)from 2000 to the present). The year of the ozone maximum exhibits little if any statistically significant difference with location, altitude, or season. The ozone seasonal cycle differs markedly between sea-level coastal stations representative of the marine boundary layer and the free troposphere sampled at elevated sites and by sondes and aircraft. However, within each of these broad tropospheric layers, the seasonal cycles are similar at all locations. Vertical profiles of the parameters that define the long-term trends and the seasonal cycle are also similar between North America and Europe. Plain Language Summary Ozone in the lower atmosphere (i.e., the troposphere) plays important roles in atmospheric chemistry, air pollution, and climate change. Ozone has a wide variety of sources and sinks that vary temporally and spatially, which complicate our efforts to fully understand ozone's temporal and spatial distribution. Strong sources (primarily man-made and natural) and sinks of ozone are located in the lower troposphere (i.e., the boundary layer), and input of ozone from the stratosphere is a strong source to the upper troposphere. Here we use long-term records (similar to 2 decades or more) of measured ozone concentrations at relatively remote locations in the northern midlatitudes (where the majority of man-made ozone sources are located) to quantify as accurately and precisely as possible ozone's long-term changes and seasonal cycles. Consistent with the similar to 3-week lifetime of ozone in the troposphere, we find substantial similarity in these temporal variations throughout this latitude band. From the start of the measurements in the late 1970s, these concentrations increased until a maximum was reached in the mid-2000s, followed by slowly decreasing concentrations. Decreasing ozone concentrations in the background troposphere is good news from the perspective of ozone's contributions to urban and regional air pollution and climate change.
引用
收藏
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Intercontinental Transport and Chemical Transformation 2002 (ITCT 2K2) and Pacific Exploration of Asian Continental Emission (PEACE) experiments:: An overview of the 2002 winter and spring intensives -: art. no. D23S01
    Parrish, DD
    Kondo, Y
    Cooper, OR
    Brock, CA
    Jaffe, DA
    Trainer, M
    Ogawa, T
    Hübler, G
    Fehsenfeld, FC
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2004, 109 (D23) : 1 - 13
  • [32] Representativeness of the IAGOS airborne measurements in the lower troposphere
    Petetin, H.
    Jeoffrion, M.
    Sauvage, B.
    Athier, G.
    Blot, R.
    Boulanger, D.
    Clark, H.
    Cousin, J. -M.
    Gheusi, F.
    Nedelec, P.
    Steinbacher, M.
    Thouret, V.
    [J]. ELEMENTA-SCIENCE OF THE ANTHROPOCENE, 2018, 6
  • [33] Characterising tropospheric O3 and CO around Frankfurt over the period 1994-2012 based on MOZAIC-IAGOS aircraft measurements
    Petetin, Herve
    Thouret, Valerie
    Fontaine, Alain
    Sauvage, Bastien
    Athier, Giles
    Blot, Romain
    Boulanger, Damien
    Cousin, Jean-Marc
    Nedelec, Philippe
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2016, 16 (23) : 15147 - 15163
  • [34] Global-scale atmosphere monitoring by in-service aircraft - current achievements and future prospects of the European Research Infrastructure IAGOS
    Petzold, Andreas
    Thouret, Valerie
    Gerbig, Christoph
    Zahn, Andreas
    Brenninkmeijer, Carl A. M.
    Gallagher, Martin
    Hermann, Markus
    Pontaud, Marc
    Ziereis, Helmut
    Boulanger, Damien
    Marshall, Julia
    Nedelec, Philippe
    Smit, Herman G. J.
    Friess, Udo
    Flaud, Jean-Marie
    Wahner, Andreas
    Cammas, Jean-Pierre
    Volz-Thomas, Andreas
    [J]. TELLUS SERIES B-CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL METEOROLOGY, 2015, 67 : 1 - 24
  • [35] Tropospheric Ozone Assessment Report: Database and metrics data of global surface ozone observations
    Schultz, Martin G.
    Schroder, Sabine
    Lyapina, Olga
    Cooper, Owen R.
    Galbally, Ian
    Petropavlovskikh, Irina
    von Schneidemesser, Erika
    Tanimoto, Hiroshi
    Elshorbany, Yasin
    Naja, Manish
    Seguel, Rodrigo J.
    Dauert, Ute
    Eckhardt, Paul
    Feigenspan, Stefan
    Fiebig, Markus
    Hjellbrekke, Anne-Gunn
    Hong, You-Deog
    Kjeld, Peter Christian
    Koide, Hiroshi
    Lear, Gary
    Tarasick, David
    Ueno, Mikio
    Wallasch, Markus
    Baumgardner, Darrel
    Chuang, Ming-Tung
    Gillett, Robert
    Lee, Meehye
    Molloy, Suzie
    Moolla, Raeesa
    Wang, Tao
    Sharps, Katrina
    Adame, Jose A.
    Ancellet, Gerard
    Apadula, Francesco
    Artaxo, Paulo
    Barlasina, Maria E.
    Bogucka, Magdalena
    Bonasoni, Paolo
    Chang, Limseok
    Colomb, Aurelie
    Cuevas-Agullo, Emilio
    Cupeiro, Manuel
    Degorska, Anna
    Ding, Aijun
    FrHlich, Marina
    Frolova, Marina
    Gadhavi, Harish
    Gheusi, Francois
    Gilge, Stefan
    Gonzalez, Margarita Y.
    [J]. ELEMENTA-SCIENCE OF THE ANTHROPOCENE, 2017, 5
  • [36] Tropospheric Ozone at Northern Mid-Latitudes: Modeled and Measured Long-Term Changes
    Staehelin, Johannes
    Tummon, Fiona
    Revell, Laura
    Stenke, Andrea
    Peter, Thomas
    [J]. ATMOSPHERE, 2017, 8 (09)
  • [37] Trajectory matching of ozonesondes and MOZAIC measurements in the UTLS - Part 2: Application to the global ozonesonde network
    Staufer, J.
    Staehelin, J.
    Stuebi, R.
    Peter, T.
    Tummon, F.
    Thouret, V.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2014, 7 (01) : 241 - 266
  • [38] Homogenizing and estimating the uncertainty in NOAA's long-term vertical ozone profile records measured with the electrochemical concentration cell ozonesonde
    Sterling, Chance W.
    Johnson, Bryan J.
    Oltmans, Samuel J.
    Smit, Herman G. J.
    Jordan, Allen F.
    Cullis, Patrick D.
    Hall, Emrys G.
    Thompson, Anne M.
    Witte, Jacquelyn C.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2018, 11 (06) : 3661 - 3687
  • [39] Multimodel ensemble simulations of present-day and near-future tropospheric ozone
    Stevenson, DS
    Dentener, FJ
    Schultz, MG
    Ellingsen, K
    van Noije, TPC
    Wild, O
    Zeng, G
    Amann, M
    Atherton, CS
    Bell, N
    Bergmann, DJ
    Bey, I
    Butler, T
    Cofala, J
    Collins, WJ
    Derwent, RG
    Doherty, RM
    Drevet, J
    Eskes, HJ
    Fiore, AM
    Gauss, M
    Hauglustaine, DA
    Horowitz, LW
    Isaksen, ISA
    Krol, MC
    Lamarque, JF
    Lawrence, MG
    Montanaro, V
    Müller, JF
    Pitari, G
    Prather, MJ
    Pyle, JA
    Rast, S
    Rodriguez, JM
    Sanderson, MG
    Savage, NH
    Shindell, DT
    Strahan, SE
    Sudo, K
    Szopa, S
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2006, 111 (D8)
  • [40] Consistency of tropospheric ozone observations made by different platforms and techniques in the global databases
    Tanimoto, Hiroshi
    Zbinden, Regina M.
    Thouret, Valerie
    Nedelec, Philippe
    [J]. TELLUS SERIES B-CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL METEOROLOGY, 2015, 67