Large impacts, past and future, of ozone‐depleting substances on Brewer‐Dobson circulation trends: a multimodel assessment
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2019
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American Geophysical Union
Citation
Polvani, L. M., Wang, L., Abalos, M., Butchart, N., Chipperfield, M. P., Dameris, M., et al. (2019). Large impacts, past and future, of ozone-depleting substances on Brewer-Dobson circulation trends: A multimodel assessment. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 124, 6669–6680. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JD029516
Abstract
Substantial increases in the atmospheric concentration of well-mixed greenhouse gases
(notably CO_(2)), such as those projected to occur by the end of the 21st century under large radiative forcing
scenarios, have long been known to cause an acceleration of the Brewer-Dobson circulation (BDC) in
climate models. More recently, however, several single-model studies have proposed that ozone-depleting
substances might also be important drivers of BDC trends. As these studies were conducted with different
forcings over different periods, it is difficult to combine them to obtain a robust quantitative picture of the
relative importance of ozone-depleting substances as drivers of BDC trends. To this end, we here
analyze—over identical past and future periods—the output from 20 similarly forced models, gathered
from two recent chemistry-climate modeling intercomparison projects. Our multimodel analysis reveals
that ozone-depleting substances are responsible for more than half of the modeled BDC trends in the two
decades 1980–2000.We also find that, as a consequence of the Montreal Protocol, decreasing
concentrations of ozone-depleting substances in coming decades will strongly decelerate the BDC until the
year 2080, reducing the age-of-air trends by more than half, and will thus substantially mitigate the impact
of increasing CO_(2). As ozone-depleting substances impact BDC trends, primarily, via the
depletion/recovery of stratospheric ozone over the South Pole, they impart seasonal and hemispheric
asymmetries to the trends which may offer opportunities for detection in coming decades.
Description
Atraccion de Talento de la Comunidad de Madrid (2016-T2/AMB-1405)
Project STEADY (CGL2017-83198-R)
Artículo firmado por 15 autores.