Chemistry–Climate Model Simulations of Twenty-First Century Stratospheric Climate and Circulation Changes

Author:

Butchart Neal1,Cionni I.2,Eyring V.2,Shepherd T. G.3,Waugh D. W.4,Akiyoshi H.5,Austin J.6,Brühl C.7,Chipperfield M. P.8,Cordero E.9,Dameris M.2,Deckert R.2,Dhomse S.8,Frith S. M.10,Garcia R. R.11,Gettelman A.11,Giorgetta M. A.12,Kinnison D. E.11,Li F.13,Mancini E.14,McLandress C.3,Pawson S.15,Pitari G.14,Plummer D. A.16,Rozanov E.17,Sassi F.18,Scinocca J. F.19,Shibata K.20,Steil B.7,Tian W.8

Affiliation:

1. Met Office Hadley Centre, Exeter, United Kingdom

2. Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt, Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany

3. University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

4. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland

5. National Institute for Environmental Studies, Tsukuba, Japan

6. Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey

7. Max Planck Institut für Chemie, Mainz, Germany

8. University of Leeds, Leeds, Yorkshire, United Kingdom

9. San Jose State University, San Jose, California

10. Science Systems and Applications, Inc., Lanham, Maryland

11. National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado

12. Max Planck Institut für Meteorologie, Hamburg, Germany

13. University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland

14. Università L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy

15. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland

16. Environment Canada, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

17. Physical–Meteorological Observatory/World Radiation Centre, Davos, and Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, Switzerland

18. Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C

19. Meteorological Service of Canada, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

20. Meteorological Research Institute, Tsukuba, Japan

Abstract

Abstract The response of stratospheric climate and circulation to increasing amounts of greenhouse gases (GHGs) and ozone recovery in the twenty-first century is analyzed in simulations of 11 chemistry–climate models using near-identical forcings and experimental setup. In addition to an overall global cooling of the stratosphere in the simulations (0.59 ± 0.07 K decade−1 at 10 hPa), ozone recovery causes a warming of the Southern Hemisphere polar lower stratosphere in summer with enhanced cooling above. The rate of warming correlates with the rate of ozone recovery projected by the models and, on average, changes from 0.8 to 0.48 K decade−1 at 100 hPa as the rate of recovery declines from the first to the second half of the century. In the winter northern polar lower stratosphere the increased radiative cooling from the growing abundance of GHGs is, in most models, balanced by adiabatic warming from stronger polar downwelling. In the Antarctic lower stratosphere the models simulate an increase in low temperature extremes required for polar stratospheric cloud (PSC) formation, but the positive trend is decreasing over the twenty-first century in all models. In the Arctic, none of the models simulates a statistically significant increase in Arctic PSCs throughout the twenty-first century. The subtropical jets accelerate in response to climate change and the ozone recovery produces a westward acceleration of the lower-stratospheric wind over the Antarctic during summer, though this response is sensitive to the rate of recovery projected by the models. There is a strengthening of the Brewer–Dobson circulation throughout the depth of the stratosphere, which reduces the mean age of air nearly everywhere at a rate of about 0.05 yr decade−1 in those models with this diagnostic. On average, the annual mean tropical upwelling in the lower stratosphere (∼70 hPa) increases by almost 2% decade−1, with 59% of this trend forced by the parameterized orographic gravity wave drag in the models. This is a consequence of the eastward acceleration of the subtropical jets, which increases the upward flux of (parameterized) momentum reaching the lower stratosphere in these latitudes.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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