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Did the COVID-19 Crisis Reduce Free Tropospheric Ozone across the Northern Hemisphere?

Authors :
Sophie Godin-Beekmann
Roeland Van Malderen
James W. Hannigan
Nicholas B. Jones
Kimberly Strong
Matthias Schneider
Bogumil Kois
Norrie Lyall
Owen R. Cooper
Peter von der Gathen
Bryan J. Johnson
Ryan M. Stauffer
Christian Plass-Dülmer
Rigel Kivi
Ralf Sussmann
Thierry Leblanc
Jonathan Davies
David W. Tarasick
Justus Notholt
Richard Engelen
Peter Oelsner
Patrick Cullis
René Stübi
Susan E. Strahan
Thomas Blumenstock
Ankie Piters
Richard Querel
Omaira García
Gonzague Romanens
Michael Gill
Dagmar Kubistin
Wolfgang Steinbrecht
Gérard Ancellet
Andy Delcloo
Carlos Torres
Ana Diaz Rodriguez
Holger Deckelmann
Kai-Lan Chang
Fernando Chouza
Emmanuel Mahieu
Anne M. Thompson
Shoma Yamanouchi
Tatsumi Nakano
Jose-Luis Hernandez
Mathias Palm
Irina Petropavlovskikh
Antje Inness
M.B. Tully
Clare Paton-Walsh
Nis Jepsen
Marc Allaart
Amelie Röhling
Christian Servais
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Throughout spring and summer 2020, ozone stations in the northern extratropics recorded unusually low ozone in the free troposphere. From April to August, and from 1 to 8 kilometers altitude, ozone was on average 7% (≈4 nmol/mol) below the 2000 to 2020 climatological mean. Such low ozone, over several months, and at so many stations, has not been observed in any previous year since at least 2000. Atmospheric composition analyses from the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service and simulations from the NASA GMI model indicate that the large 2020 springtime ozone depletion in the Arctic stratosphere contributed less than one quarter of the observed tropospheric anomaly. The observed anomaly is consistent with recent chemistry-climate model simulations, which assume emissions reductions similar to those caused by the COVID-19 crisis. COVID-19 related emissions reductions appear to be the major cause for the observed reduced free tropospheric ozone in 2020.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6bf2e8e3625633a7cc6decbe8478aef8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/essoar.10505226.1