Analysis of the latitudinal variability of tropospheric ozone in the Arctic using the large number of aircraft and ozonesonde observations in early summer 2008

During the 2008 International Polar Year, the POLARCAT (Polar Study using Aircraft, Remote Sensing, Surface Measurements, and Models of Climate Chemistry, Aerosols, and Transport) campaign, conducted in summer over Greenland and Canada, produced a large number of measurements from three aircraft and seven ozonesonde stations. Here we present an observation-integrated analysis based on three different types of O3 measurements: airborne lidar, airborne UV absorption or chemiluminescence measurement, and intensified electrochemical concentration cell (ECC) ozonesonde profiles. Discussion of the latitudinal and vertical variability of tropospheric ozone north of 55° N during this period is performed with the aid of a regional model (WFR-Chem). The model is able to reproduce the O3 latitudinal and vertical variability but with a negative O3 bias of 6–15 ppbv in the free troposphere above 4 km, especially over Canada. For Canada, large average CO concentrations in the free troposphere above 4 km ( >  130 ppbv) and the weak correlation (  40 %) and the higher values of the 75th PV percentile. It is related to the persistence of cyclonic activity during the summer over Baffin Bay. Using differences between average concentration above Northern and Southern Canada, a weak negative latitudinal summer ozone gradient of −6 to −8 ppbv is found in the mid-troposphere between 4 and 8 km. This is attributed to an efficient O3 photochemical production from BB emissions at latitudes less than 65° N, while the STE contribution is more homogeneous in the latitude range 55–70° N. A positive ozone latitudinal gradient of 12 ppbv is observed in the same altitude range over Greenland not because of an increasing latitudinal influence of STE, but because of different long-range transport from multiple mid-latitude sources (North America, Europe, and even Asia for latitudes higher than 77° N).

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Author Ancellet, Gerard
Daskalakis, Nikos
Raut, Jean Christophe
Tarasick, David
Hair, Jonathan
Quennehen, Boris
Ravetta, François
Schlager, Hans
Weinheimer, Andrew J.
Thompson, Anne M.
Johnson, Bryan
Thomas, Jennie L.
Law, Katharine S.
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2016-10-28T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2023-08-18T19:02:04.757203
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:18905
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Ancellet, Gerard, Daskalakis, Nikos, Raut, Jean Christophe, Tarasick, David, Hair, Jonathan, Quennehen, Boris, Ravetta, François, Schlager, Hans, Weinheimer, Andrew J., Thompson, Anne M., Johnson, Bryan, Thomas, Jennie L., Law, Katharine S.. (2016). Analysis of the latitudinal variability of tropospheric ozone in the Arctic using the large number of aircraft and ozonesonde observations in early summer 2008. UCAR/NCAR - Library. http://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7765h1x. Accessed 24 April 2025.

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