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A multi-model intercomparison of halogenated very short-lived substances (TransCom-VSLS):linking oceanic emissions and tropospheric transport for a reconciled estimate of the stratospheric source gas injection of bromine

Authors :
Hossaini, R.
Patra, P. K.
Leeson, A. A.
Krysztofiak, G.
Abraham, N. L.
Archibald, A. T.
Aschmann, J.
Atlas, E. L.
Belikov, D. A.
Bönisch, H.
Carpenter, L. J.
Dhomse, S.
Dorf, M.
Engel, A.
Feng, W.
Fuhlbrügge, S.
Griffiths, P. T.
Harris, N. R. P.
Hommel, R.
Keber, T.
Krüger, K.
Lennartz, S. T.
Maksyutov, S.
Mantle, H.
Mills, G. P.
Montzka, S. A.
Moore, F.
Navarro, M. A.
Oram, D. E.
Pfeilsticker, K.
Pyle, J. A.
Quack, B.
Saikawa, E.
Saiz-Lopez, A.
Sala, S.
Sinnhuber, B.-M.
Taguchi, S.
Tegtmeier, S.
Lidster, R. T.
Ziska, F.
Hossaini, R.
Patra, P. K.
Leeson, A. A.
Krysztofiak, G.
Abraham, N. L.
Archibald, A. T.
Aschmann, J.
Atlas, E. L.
Belikov, D. A.
Bönisch, H.
Carpenter, L. J.
Dhomse, S.
Dorf, M.
Engel, A.
Feng, W.
Fuhlbrügge, S.
Griffiths, P. T.
Harris, N. R. P.
Hommel, R.
Keber, T.
Krüger, K.
Lennartz, S. T.
Maksyutov, S.
Mantle, H.
Mills, G. P.
Montzka, S. A.
Moore, F.
Navarro, M. A.
Oram, D. E.
Pfeilsticker, K.
Pyle, J. A.
Quack, B.
Saikawa, E.
Saiz-Lopez, A.
Sala, S.
Sinnhuber, B.-M.
Taguchi, S.
Tegtmeier, S.
Lidster, R. T.
Ziska, F.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The first concerted multi-model intercomparison of halogenated very short-lived substances (VSLS) has been performed, within the framework of the ongoing Atmospheric Tracer Transport Model Intercomparison Project (TransCom). Eleven global models or model variants participated (nine chemical transport models and two chemistry–climate models) by simulating the major natural bromine VSLS, bromoform (CHBr3) and dibromomethane (CH2Br2), over a 20-year period (1993–2012). Except for three model simulations, all others were driven offline by (or nudged to) reanalysed meteorology. The overarching goal of TransCom-VSLS was to provide a reconciled model estimate of the stratospheric source gas injection (SGI) of bromine from these gases, to constrain the current measurement-derived range, and to investigate inter-model differences due to emissions and transport processes. Models ran with standardised idealised chemistry, to isolate differences due to transport, and we investigated the sensitivity of results to a range of VSLS emission inventories. Models were tested in their ability to reproduce the observed seasonal and spatial distribution of VSLS at the surface, using measurements from NOAA's long-term global monitoring network, and in the tropical troposphere, using recent aircraft measurements – including high-altitude observations from the NASA Global Hawk platform. The models generally capture the observed seasonal cycle of surface CHBr3 and CH2Br2 well, with a strong model–measurement correlation (r ≥ 0.7) at most sites. In a given model, the absolute model–measurement agreement at the surface is highly sensitive to the choice of emissions. Large inter-model differences are apparent when using the same emission inventory, highlighting the challenges faced in evaluating such inventories at the global scale. Across the ensemble, most consistency is found within the tropics where most of the models (8 out of 11) achieve best agreement to surface CHBr3 observations usin

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/80643/1/acp_16_9163_2016.pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1032300209
Document Type :
Electronic Resource