evaluation of satellite retrievals of o 3 and hno 3 in the upper troposphere:

1
Ozone is produced in the upper troposphere through the cycling of NO x between NO and NO 2 as seen in the schematic below. The ozone production efficiency (OPE) is defined as the number of ozone molecules produced by this cycle before the cycle is broken by oxidation of NO x to HNO 3 [Liu et al, 1987]. Convective outflow in the upper troposphere contains some initial ozone and NO x concentration but is depleted of HNO 3 due to its high solubility [Mari et al, 2000]. The loss of NO x during transport is therefore equivalent to HNO 3 production, and the OPE can be inferred by the ratio of O 3 production to HNO 3 production. Evaluation of satellite retrievals of O 3 and HNO 3 in the upper troposphere: Application to ozone production efficiency Matthew Cooper 1 , Randall Martin 1,2 , Chris Boone 3 , Kaley Walker 3,4 , Peter Bernath 3,5 , Chris McLinden 6 , Doug Degenstein 7 , Bastien Sauvage 8 , Catherine Wespes 9 Summary Ozone in the upper troposphere has a large radiative forcing of climate. We present an evaluation of tropical upper tropospheric ozone retrieved from two satellite instruments with in situ measurements. The OSIRIS spectrograph measures scattered sunlight in the limb with wavelengths ranging from ultraviolet to infrared [Llewellyn et al, 2004]. ACE-FTS is a solar occultation instrument that measures in the infrared, providing retrievals for ozone, nitric acid, and other species [ Bernath et al, 2005]. Ozone retrievals are evaluated against ozonesondes from the SHADOZ network, as well as aircraft measurements from the MOZAIC program [Marenco et al, 1998; Volz-Thomas et al., 2005 ], which places instruments onboard commercial aircraft. ACE-FTS nitric acid and total odd nitrogen (NO y ) are evaluated against MOZAIC NO y with the aid of a global chemical transport model (GEOS-Chem). We demonstrate that the ozone production efficiency in the upper troposphere can be determined using ACE-FTS O 3 and HNO 3 measurements. The resulting value of 170±70 mol/mol is in broad agreement with model simulations. This work demonstrates a new application of satellite observations in the tropical troposphere to provide insight into ozone production. 1.Dalhousie University 2. Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics 3. University of Waterloo 4. University of Toronto 5. University of York 6. Environment Canada 7. University of Saskatchewan 8. Université de Toulouse III 9. Université Libre de Bruxelles Evaluation of Ozone Retrievals Evaluation of Nitric Acid Retrieval Ozone Production Efficiency Maps of seasonal mean upper tropospheric (10-12 km) ozone concentrations from MOZAIC (2001-2005), OSIRIS (2001-2009), ACE-FTS (2004-2009) and GEOS-Chem (2000) are presented here. Additional ozonesondes are also displayed on the MOZAIC maps. We reject all data within 2 km of the tropopause to account for the satellite vertical resolution and avoid stratospheric air. All four panels broadly indicate the wave-one pattern of higher concentrations over the tropical Atlantic Ocean than the Pacific that reflects ozone production from lightning and persistent subsidence over the tropical Atlantic. MOZAIC and GEOS-Chem show good agreement throughout the tropics (r=0.7, mean bias -6%). Both ACE-FTS and OSIRIS have biases throughout the tropics compared to GEOS-Chem (r =0.5, mean bias 13% for ACE-FTS, r=0.3, mean bias 13% for OSIRIS) and MOZAIC and ozonesondes (r = 0.5, mean bias 19% for ACE-FTS, r =0.3, mean bias 21% for OSIRIS). HNO 3 is a major contributor to total odd nitrogen (NO y ) in the tropical troposphere. Annual mean measurements of upper tropospheric (10-12 km) NO y from MOZAIC are used to evaluate ACE-FTS and GEOS-Chem. ACE-FTS NO y is approximated as NO y = NO + NO 2 + HNO 3 . Comparisons between MOZAIC NO y observations and GEOS-Chem simulated values show a mean low bias in the model of 14%. However, both ACE-FTS HNO 3 and NO y values are ACE-FTS measurements of upper tropospheric O 3 and HNO 3 can be used to estimate OPE. As explained above, OPE can be given by the slope of the line of best fit for this plot. The resulting estimate of OPE is 170±70 mol/mol. The total uncertainty of the OPE calculation is 70 mol/mol. This reflects errors due to biases in ACE-FTS measurements (60 mol/mol), the standard error of the line of best fit slope (10 mol/mol), and sensitivity to surface pollution sources (20 mol/mol). The sensitivity due to surface pollution sources causes OPE to decrease with increasing CO concentrations, and was estimated using ACE- FTS CO measurements. This value is in broad agreement with GEOS- Chem simulations, which calculate an OPE range of 100-150 mol/mol for the middle and upper troposphere in the tropics [Sauvage et al, 2007]. NO 2 NO HNO 3 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 HNO 3 (ppbv) 80 100 60 40 20 O 3 (ppbv) GEOS-Chem MOZAIC OSIRIS ACE-FTS DJF MAM JJA SON References and Acknowledgements OPE = Slope = 170 mol O 3 / mol HNO 3 3 3 3 HNO O L P OPE x NO O 3 O P Bernath, P.F, C.T. McElroy, M.C. Abrams et al (2005) Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment (ACE): Mission overview, Geophys. Res. Lett. 32, L15S01 Liu, S.C, M. Trainer, F.C. Fehsenfeld, D.D Parrish, E.J. Williams, D.W. Fahey, G. Hübler and P.C. Murphy (1987), Ozone production in the rural troposphere and the implications for regional and global ozone distributions, J. Geophys. Res 92 (D4) 4191-4207 Llewellyn, E.J., N.D. Lloyd, D.A. Degenstein et al (2004), The OSIRIS instrument on the Odin spacecraft, Can. J. Phys. 82, 411-422, doi: 10.1139/P04-005 Mari, C., D.J. Jacob, P. Bechtold (2000), Transport and scavenging of soluble gases in a deep convective cloud, J. Geophy. Res., 105 (D17), 22255-22267 Sauvage, B, R.V. Martin, A. van Donkelaar and J.R. Ziemke (2007), Quantification of the factors controlling tropical tropospheric ozone and the South Atlantic maximum, J. Geophys. Res. 112 (D11309) doi: 10.129/2006JD008008 Marenco, A., V. Thouret, P. Nédélec et al. (1998), Measurement of ozone and water vapor by Airbus in-service aircraft: The MOZAIC airborne program, An overview, J. Geophys. Res., 103(D19), 25631-25642. Volz-Thomas, A., M. Berg, T. Heil, N. Houben, A. Lerner, W. Petrick, D. Raak and H.-W. Pätz (2005), Measurements Convective Outflow: Initial NO & O 3 , No HNO 3 Estimating Ozone Production Efficiency from Satellite Observations ACE-FTS O 3 vs HNO 3 , 20ºN - 20ºS, 10.5 km 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Ozone Mixing Ratio (ppbv) GEOS-Chem NO y (MOZAIC Locations) MOZAIC NO y GEOS-Chem NO y (ACE-FTS Locations) GEOS-Chem HNO 3 (ACE-FTS Locations) ACE-FTS NO y ACE-FTS HNO 3 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 NO y Mixing Ratio (ppbv) 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 HNO 3 Mixing Ratio (ppbv)

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Evaluation of satellite retrievals of O 3 and HNO 3 in the upper troposphere: Application to ozone production efficiency - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Evaluation of satellite retrievals of O 3  and HNO 3  in the upper troposphere:

Ozone is produced in the upper troposphere through the cycling of NOx between NO and NO2 as seen in the schematic below. The ozone production efficiency (OPE) is defined as the number of ozone molecules produced by this cycle before the cycle is broken by oxidation of NOx to HNO3 [Liu et al, 1987]. Convective outflow in the upper troposphere contains some initial ozone and NOx concentration but is depleted of HNO3 due to its high solubility [Mari et al, 2000]. The loss of NOx during transport is therefore equivalent to HNO3 production, and the OPE can be inferred by the ratio of O3 production to HNO3 production.

Evaluation of satellite retrievals of O3 and HNO3 in the upper troposphere: Application to ozone production efficiency

Matthew Cooper1, Randall Martin1,2, Chris Boone3, Kaley Walker3,4, Peter Bernath3,5, Chris McLinden6, Doug Degenstein7, Bastien Sauvage8, Catherine Wespes9

Summary

Ozone in the upper troposphere has a large radiative forcing of climate. We present an evaluation of tropical upper tropospheric ozone retrieved from two satellite instruments with in situ measurements. The OSIRIS spectrograph measures scattered sunlight in the limb with wavelengths ranging from ultraviolet to infrared [Llewellyn et al, 2004]. ACE-FTS is a solar occultation instrument that measures in the infrared, providing retrievals for ozone, nitric acid, and other species [ Bernath et al, 2005]. Ozone retrievals are evaluated against ozonesondes from the SHADOZ network, as well as aircraft measurements from the MOZAIC program [Marenco et al, 1998; Volz-Thomas et al., 2005], which places instruments onboard commercial aircraft. ACE-FTS nitric acid and total odd nitrogen (NO y) are evaluated against MOZAIC NOy with the aid of a global chemical transport model (GEOS-Chem). We demonstrate that the ozone production efficiency in the upper troposphere can be determined using ACE-FTS O 3 and HNO3 measurements. The resulting value of 170±70 mol/mol is in broad agreement with model simulations. This work demonstrates a new application of satellite observations in the tropical troposphere to provide insight into ozone production.

1.Dalhousie University 2. Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics 3. University of Waterloo 4. University of Toronto 5. University of York 6. Environment Canada 7. University of Saskatchewan 8. Université de Toulouse III 9. Université Libre de Bruxelles

Evaluation of Ozone Retrievals

Evaluation of Nitric Acid Retrieval

Ozone Production Efficiency

Maps of seasonal mean upper tropospheric (10-12 km) ozone concentrations from MOZAIC (2001-2005), OSIRIS (2001-2009), ACE-FTS (2004-2009) and GEOS-Chem (2000) are presented here. Additional ozonesondes are also displayed on the MOZAIC maps. We reject all data within 2 km of the tropopause to account for the satellite vertical resolution and avoid stratospheric air. All four panels broadly indicate the wave-one pattern of higher concentrations over the tropical Atlantic Ocean than the Pacific that reflects ozone production from lightning and persistent subsidence over the tropical Atlantic.

MOZAIC and GEOS-Chem show good agreement throughout the tropics (r=0.7, mean bias -6%). Both ACE-FTS and OSIRIS have biases throughout the tropics compared to GEOS-Chem (r =0.5, mean bias 13% for ACE-FTS, r=0.3, mean bias 13% for OSIRIS) and MOZAIC and ozonesondes (r = 0.5, mean bias 19% for ACE-FTS, r =0.3, mean bias 21% for OSIRIS).

HNO3 is a major contributor to total odd nitrogen (NOy) in the tropical troposphere. Annual mean measurements of upper tropospheric (10-12 km) NOy from MOZAIC are used to evaluate ACE-FTS and GEOS-Chem. ACE-FTS NOy is approximated as NOy = NO + NO2 + HNO3.

Comparisons between MOZAIC NOy observations and GEOS-Chem simulated values show a mean low bias in the model of 14%. However, both ACE-FTS HNO3 and NOy values are significantly larger than the simulated values (median bias 74% for HNO3, 86% for NOy).

ACE-FTS measurements of upper tropospheric O3 and HNO3 can be used to estimate OPE. As explained above, OPE can be given by the slope of the line of best fit for this plot. The resulting estimate of OPE is 170±70 mol/mol.

The total uncertainty of the OPE calculation is 70 mol/mol. This reflects errors due to biases in ACE-FTS measurements (60 mol/mol), the standard error of the line of best fit slope (10 mol/mol), and sensitivity to surface pollution sources (20 mol/mol). The sensitivity due to surface pollution sources causes OPE to decrease with increasing CO concentrations, and was estimated using ACE-FTS CO measurements.

This value is in broad agreement with GEOS-Chem simulations, which calculate an OPE range of 100-150 mol/mol for the middle and upper troposphere in the tropics [Sauvage et al, 2007].

NO2

NO HNO3

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 HNO3 (ppbv)

80

100

60

40

20

O3 (

ppbv

)

GEOS-ChemMOZAIC OSIRIS ACE-FTS

DJF

MAM

JJA

SON

References and Acknowledgements

OPE = Slope = 170 mol O3 / mol HNO3

3

33

HNO

O

L

POPE

xNO

O

3OP

Bernath, P.F, C.T. McElroy, M.C. Abrams et al (2005) Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment (ACE): Mission overview, Geophys. Res. Lett. 32, L15S01

Liu, S.C, M. Trainer, F.C. Fehsenfeld, D.D Parrish, E.J. Williams, D.W. Fahey, G. Hübler and P.C. Murphy (1987), Ozone production in the rural troposphere and the implications for regional and global ozone distributions, J. Geophys. Res 92 (D4) 4191-4207

Llewellyn, E.J., N.D. Lloyd, D.A. Degenstein et al (2004), The OSIRIS instrument on the Odin spacecraft, Can. J. Phys. 82, 411-422, doi: 10.1139/P04-005

Mari, C., D.J. Jacob, P. Bechtold (2000), Transport and scavenging of soluble gases in a deep convective cloud, J. Geophy. Res., 105 (D17), 22255-22267

Sauvage, B, R.V. Martin, A. van Donkelaar and J.R. Ziemke (2007), Quantification of the factors controlling tropical tropospheric ozone and the South Atlantic maximum, J. Geophys. Res. 112 (D11309) doi: 10.129/2006JD008008

Marenco, A., V. Thouret, P. Nédélec et al. (1998), Measurement of ozone and water vapor by Airbus in-service aircraft: The MOZAIC airborne program, An overview, J. Geophys. Res., 103(D19), 25631-25642.

Volz-Thomas, A., M. Berg, T. Heil, N. Houben, A. Lerner, W. Petrick, D. Raak and H.-W. Pätz (2005), Measurements of total odd nitrogen (NOy) aboard MOZAIC in-service aircraft: instrument design, operation and performance, Atm. Chem. Phys. 5, 583-595

This work was supported by the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences, and by the Canadian Space Agency’s Space Science Enhancement Program

Convective Outflow:

Initial NO & O3,

No HNO3

Estimating Ozone Production Efficiency from Satellite Observations

ACE-FTS O3 vs HNO3, 20ºN - 20ºS, 10.5 km 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Ozone Mixing Ratio (ppbv)

GEOS-Chem NOy (MOZAIC Locations)

MOZAIC NOy

GEOS-Chem NOy (ACE-FTS Locations) GEOS-Chem HNO3 (ACE-FTS Locations)

ACE-FTS NOy ACE-FTS HNO3

0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 NOy Mixing Ratio (ppbv)

0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 HNO3 Mixing Ratio (ppbv)