Ground-based ozone profiles over central Europe: incorporating anomalous observations into the analysis of stratospheric ozone trends
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Published:2019-04-03
Issue:7
Volume:19
Page:4289-4309
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Bernet LeonieORCID, von Clarmann Thomas, Godin-Beekmann Sophie, Ancellet GérardORCID, Maillard Barras Eliane, Stübi René, Steinbrecht WolfgangORCID, Kämpfer Niklaus, Hocke KlemensORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Observing stratospheric ozone is essential to assess whether the Montreal
Protocol has succeeded in saving the ozone layer by banning ozone depleting
substances. Recent studies have reported positive trends, indicating that
ozone is recovering in the upper stratosphere at mid-latitudes, but the trend
magnitudes differ, and uncertainties are still high. Trends and their
uncertainties are influenced by factors such as instrumental drifts, sampling
patterns, discontinuities, biases, or short-term anomalies that may all mask
a potential ozone recovery. The present study investigates how anomalies,
temporal measurement sampling rates, and trend period lengths influence
resulting trends. We present an approach for handling suspicious anomalies in
trend estimations. For this, we analysed multiple ground-based stratospheric
ozone records in central Europe to identify anomalous periods in data from
the GROund-based Millimetre-wave Ozone Spectrometer (GROMOS) located in Bern,
Switzerland. The detected anomalies were then used to estimate ozone trends
from the GROMOS time series by considering the anomalous observations in the
regression. We compare our improved GROMOS trend estimate with results
derived from the other ground-based ozone records (lidars, ozonesondes, and
microwave radiometers), that are all part of the Network for the Detection of
Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC). The data indicate positive trends of
1 % decade−1 to 3 % decade−1 at an altitude of about
39 km (3 hPa), providing a confirmation of ozone recovery in
the upper stratosphere in agreement with satellite observations. At lower
altitudes, the ground station data show inconsistent trend results, which
emphasize the importance of ongoing research on ozone trends in the lower
stratosphere. Our presented method of a combined analysis of ground station
data provides a useful approach to recognize and to reduce uncertainties in
stratospheric ozone trends by considering anomalies in the trend estimation.
We conclude that stratospheric trend estimations still need improvement and
that our approach provides a tool that can also be useful for other data
sets.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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