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Merged SAGE II, Ozone_cci and OMPS ozone profile dataset and evaluation of ozone trends in the stratosphere.

Authors :
Sofieva, Viktoria F.
Kyrölä, Erkki
Laine, Marko
Tamminen, Johanna
Degenstein, Doug
Bourassa, Adam
Roth, Chris
Zawada, Daniel
Weber, Mark
Rozanov, Alexei
Rahpoe, Nabiz
Stiller, Gabriele
Laeng, Alexandra
von Clarmann, Thomas
Walker, Kaley A.
Sheese, Patrick
Hubert, Daan
van Roozendael, Michel
Zehner, Claus
Damadeo, Robert
Source :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics; 2017, Vol. 17 Issue 20, p12533-12552, 20p, 1 Diagram, 1 Chart, 10 Graphs, 1 Map
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

In this paper, we present a merged dataset of ozone profiles from several satellite instruments: SAGE II on ERBS, GOMOS, SCIAMACHY and MIPAS on Envisat, OSIRIS on Odin, ACE-FTS on SCISAT, and OMPS on Suomi-NPP. The merged dataset is created in the framework of the European Space Agency Climate Change Initiative (Ozone_cci) with the aim of analyzing stratospheric ozone trends. For the merged dataset, we used the latest versions of the original ozone datasets. The datasets from the individual instruments have been extensively validated and intercompared; only those datasets which are in good agreement, and do not exhibit significant drifts with respect to collocated ground-based observations and with respect to each other, are used for merging. The long-term SAGE-CCI-OMPS dataset is created by computation and merging of deseasonalized anomalies from individual instruments. The merged SAGE-CCI-OMPS dataset consists of deseasonalized anomalies of ozone in 10° latitude bands from 90° S to 90° N and from 10 to 50 km in steps of 1 km covering the period from October 1984 to July 2016. This newly created dataset is used for evaluating ozone trends in the stratosphere through multiple linear regression. Negative ozone trends in the upper stratosphere are observed before 1997 and positive trends are found after 1997. The upper stratospheric trends are statistically significant at midlatitudes and indicate ozone recovery, as expected from the decrease of stratospheric halogens that started in the middle of the 1990s and stratospheric cooling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16807316
Volume :
17
Issue :
20
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126005049
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-12533-2017