Diverging Ozone Trends Above Western North America: Boundary Layer Decreases Versus Free Tropospheric Increases

Author:

Chang Kai‐Lan12ORCID,Cooper Owen R.12ORCID,Rodriguez Gavin12,Iraci Laura T.3ORCID,Yates Emma L.34,Johnson Matthew S.3ORCID,Gaudel Audrey12ORCID,Jaffe Daniel A.56ORCID,Bernays Noah5,Clark Hannah7ORCID,Effertz Peter18ORCID,Leblanc Thierry9,Petropavlovskikh Irina18ORCID,Sauvage Bastien10,Tarasick David W.11ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

2. NOAA Chemical Sciences Laboratory Boulder CO USA

3. NASA Ames Research Center Earth Science Division Moffett Field CA USA

4. Bay Area Environmental Research Institute Moffett Field CA USA

5. School of STEM University of Washington Bothell Bothell WA USA

6. Department of Atmospheric Sciences University of Washington Seattle Seattle WA USA

7. IAGOS‐AISBL Brussels Belgium

8. NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory Boulder CO USA

9. Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Wrightwood CA USA

10. Laboratoire d’Aérologie (LAERO) Université Toulouse III ‐ Paul Sabatier CNRS Toulouse France

11. Environment and Climate Change Canada Toronto ON Canada

Abstract

AbstractThis study has produced an improved percentile and seasonal (median) trend estimate of free tropospheric ozone above western North America (WNA), through a data fusion of ozonesonde, lidar, commercial aircraft, and field campaign measurements. Our method combines heterogeneous data sets according to the consensus data characteristics and inherent uncertainty in order to produce our best fused product. In response to different data collection environments (in situ or ground‐based), we investigate the ozone variability based on a wide range of percentiles, which is preferable for trend detection due to tropospheric ozone's high degree of heteroscedasticity (i.e., inconsistent trends and variability between different ozone percentiles). We then compare the ozone trends and variability above the California sub‐domain to the full WNA region for better understanding of the correlations between different regional scales. In California, the 1995–2021 percentile (from the 5th to 95th) and seasonal trends are clearly positive in terms of high signal‐to‐noise ratios. The magnitude of the trends is generally weaker over WNA compared to California, but reliable positive trends can still be found between the 10th and 70th percentiles, as well as winter and summer, whereas autumn shows a negative trend over the same period. In addition, dozens of rural surface sites across the region are selected to represent the boundary layer variability. In contrast to increasing free tropospheric ozone, we find overall strong negative surface trends since 1995, with the greatest divergence found in summer. Throughout the analysis implications of the COVID‐19 economic downturn on ozone variability are discussed.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Atmospheric Science,Geophysics

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