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Intercomparison of atmospheric carbonyl sulfide (TransCom-COS; Part Two): Evaluation of optimized fluxes using ground-based and aircraft observations

Authors :
Jin Ma
Marine Remaud
Philippe Peylin
Prabir K. Patra
Yosuke Niwa
Christian Rödenbeck
Mike Cartwright
Jeremy J Harrison
Martyn P. Chipperfield
Richard J Pope
Chris Wilson
Sauveur Belviso
Stephen A. Montzka
Isaac Josef Vimont
Fred L. Moore
Elliot L. Atlas
Efrat Schwartz
Maarten C. Krol
Source :
ESS Open Archive
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Authorea, Inc., 2023.

Abstract

We present a comparison of atmospheric transport models that simulate carbonyl sulfide (COS). This is part II of the ongoing Atmospheric Transport Model (ATM) Inter-comparison Project (TransCom–COS). Differently from part I, we focus on seven model intercomparison by transporting two recent COS inversions of NOAA surface data within TM5-4DVAR and LMDz models. The main goals of TransCom-COS part II are (a) to compare the COS simulations using the two sets of optimized fluxes with simulations that use a control scenario (part I) and (b) to evaluate the simulated tropospheric COS abundance with aircraft-based observations from various sources. The output of the seven transport models are grouped in terms of their vertical mixing strength: strong and weak mixing. The results indicate that all transport models capture the meridional distribution of COS at the surface well. Model simulations generally match the aircraft campaigns HIPPO and ATom. Comparisons to HIPPO and ATom demonstrate a gap between observed and modelled COS over the Pacific Ocean at 0–40$\degree$N, indicating a potential missing source in the free troposphere. The effects of seasonal continental COS uptake by the biosphere, observed on HIPPO and ATom over oceans, is well reproduced by the simulations. We found that the strength of the vertical mixing within the column as represented in the various atmospheric transport models explains much of the model to model differences. We also found that weak-mixing models transporting the optimized flux derived from the strong-mixing TM5 model show a too strong seasonal cycle at high latitudes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ESS Open Archive
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5e8dabcb620a2c832460a4525fe8e00b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.22541/essoar.168332208.81783922/v1