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An improved and extended parameterization of the CO2 15 µm cooling in the middle and upper atmosphere (CO2_cool_fort-1.0).

Authors :
López-Puertas, Manuel
Fabiano, Federico
Fomichev, Victor
Funke, Bernd
Marsh, Daniel R.
Source :
Geoscientific Model Development. 2024, Vol. 17 Issue 10, p4401-4432. 32p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The radiative infrared cooling of CO 2 in the middle atmosphere, where it emits under non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (non-LTE) conditions, is a crucial contribution to the energy balance of this region and hence to establishing its thermal structure. The non-LTE computation is too CPU time-consuming to be fully incorporated into climate models, and hence it is parameterized. The most used parameterization of the CO 2 15 µm cooling for Earth's middle and upper atmosphere was developed by. The valid range of this parameterization with respect to CO 2 volume mixing ratios (VMRs) is, however, exceeded by the CO 2 of several scenarios considered in the Coupled Climate Model Intercomparison Projects, in particular the abrupt-4 × CO 2 experiment. Therefore, an extension, as well as an update, of that parameterization is both needed and timely. In this work, we present an update of that parameterization that now covers CO 2 volume mixing ratios in the lower atmosphere from ∼0.5 to over 10 times the CO 2 pre-industrial value of 284 ppmv (i.e. 150 to 3000 ppmv). Furthermore, it is improved by using a more contemporary CO 2 line list and the collisional rates that affect the CO 2 cooling rates. Overall, its accuracy is improved when tested for the reference temperature profiles as well as for measured temperature fields covering all expected conditions (latitude and season) of the middle atmosphere. The errors obtained for the reference temperature profiles are below 0.5 K d -1 for the present-day and lower CO 2 VMRs. Those errors increase to ∼1 –2K d -1 at altitudes between 110 and 120 km for CO 2 concentrations of 2 to 3 times the pre-industrial values. For very high CO 2 concentrations (4 to 10 times the pre-industrial abundances), those errors are below ∼1 K d -1 for most regions and conditions, except at 107–135 km, where the parameterization overestimates them by ∼1.2 %. These errors are comparable to the deviation of the non-LTE cooling rates with respect to LTE at about 70 km and below, but they are negligible (several times smaller) above that altitude. When applied to a large dataset of global (pole to pole and four seasons) temperature profiles measured by MIPAS (Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Spectroscopy) (middle- and upper-atmosphere mode), the errors of the parameterization for the mean cooling rate (bias) are generally below 0.5 K d -1 , except between 5×10-3 and 3×10-4 hPa (∼85 –98 km), where they can reach biases of 1–2 K d -1. For single-temperature profiles, the cooling rate error (estimated by the root mean square – rms – of a statistically significant sample) is about 1–2 K d -1 below 5×10-3 hPa (∼85 km) and above 2×10-4 hPa (∼102 km). In the intermediate region, however, it is between 2 and 7 K d -1. For elevated stratopause events, the parameterization underestimates the mean cooling rates by 3–7 K d -1 (∼ 10 %) at altitudes of 85–95 km and the individual cooling rates show a significant rms (5–15 K d -1). Further, we have also tested the parameterization for the temperature obtained by a high-resolution version of the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model (WACCM-X), which shows a large temperature variability and wave structure in the middle atmosphere. In this case, the mean (bias) error of the parameterization is very small, smaller than 0.5 K d -1 for most atmospheric layers, reaching only maximum values of 2 K d -1 near 5×10-4 hPa (∼ 96 km). The rms has values of 1–2 K d -1 (∼20 %) below ∼2×10-2 hPa (∼80 km) and values smaller than 4 K d -1 (∼2 %) above 10 -4 hPa (∼105 km). In the intermediate region between ∼5×10-3 and ∼2×10-4 hPa (85–102 km), the rms is in the range of 5–12 K d -1. While these values are significant in percentage at ∼5×10-3 – 5×10-4 hPa, they are very small above ∼5×10-4 hPa (96 km). The routine is very fast, taking (1.5–7.5) ×10-5 s, depending on the extension of the atmospheric profile, the processor and the Fortran compiler. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1991959X
Volume :
17
Issue :
10
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Geoscientific Model Development
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177779229
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-17-4401-2024