Strong Dynamical Modulation of the Cooling of the Polar Stratosphere Associated with the Antarctic Ozone Hole

Andrew Orr British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, United Kingdom

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Thomas J. Bracegirdle British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, United Kingdom

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J. Scott Hosking British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, United Kingdom

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Wuhu Feng National Centre for Atmospheric Science, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom

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Howard K. Roscoe British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, United Kingdom

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Joanna D. Haigh Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom

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Abstract

A model simulation forced by prescribed ozone depletion shows strong dynamical modulation of the springtime cooling of the polar stratosphere associated with the Antarctic ozone hole. The authors find that in late spring the anomalous radiative cooling in response to ozone depletion is almost canceled above ~100 hPa by an increase in dynamical heating. Between ~300 and ~100 hPa, however, it is enhanced by a reduction in dynamical heating, resulting in the descent of the cold anomaly down to the tropopause. In early summer increased dynamical heating dominates as the radiative cooling diminishes so that the cold anomaly associated with the delayed breakup of the stratospheric vortex is reduced. The anomalous dynamical heating is driven by changes in the Brewer–Dobson circulation arising primarily from the dissipation of resolved-scale waves. The model changes are broadly consistent with trends from reanalysis and offline diagnoses of heating rates using a radiation scheme. These results help one to understand dynamically induced change in the evolution and timing of the stratospheric vortex in recent decades and will help to enable improved simulation of the Southern Hemisphere climate.

Corresponding author address: Andrew Orr, British Antarctic Survey Climate Programme, High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ET, United Kingdom. E-mail: anmcr@bas.ac.uk

Abstract

A model simulation forced by prescribed ozone depletion shows strong dynamical modulation of the springtime cooling of the polar stratosphere associated with the Antarctic ozone hole. The authors find that in late spring the anomalous radiative cooling in response to ozone depletion is almost canceled above ~100 hPa by an increase in dynamical heating. Between ~300 and ~100 hPa, however, it is enhanced by a reduction in dynamical heating, resulting in the descent of the cold anomaly down to the tropopause. In early summer increased dynamical heating dominates as the radiative cooling diminishes so that the cold anomaly associated with the delayed breakup of the stratospheric vortex is reduced. The anomalous dynamical heating is driven by changes in the Brewer–Dobson circulation arising primarily from the dissipation of resolved-scale waves. The model changes are broadly consistent with trends from reanalysis and offline diagnoses of heating rates using a radiation scheme. These results help one to understand dynamically induced change in the evolution and timing of the stratospheric vortex in recent decades and will help to enable improved simulation of the Southern Hemisphere climate.

Corresponding author address: Andrew Orr, British Antarctic Survey Climate Programme, High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ET, United Kingdom. E-mail: anmcr@bas.ac.uk
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