Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Mar 2015)

Copernicus stratospheric ozone service, 2009–2012: validation, system intercomparison and roles of input data sets

  • K. Lefever,
  • R. van der A,
  • F. Baier,
  • Y. Christophe,
  • Q. Errera,
  • H. Eskes,
  • J. Flemming,
  • A. Inness,
  • L. Jones,
  • J.-C. Lambert,
  • B. Langerock,
  • M. G. Schultz,
  • O. Stein,
  • A. Wagner,
  • S. Chabrillat

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-15-2269-2015
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 5
pp. 2269 – 2293

Abstract

Read online

This paper evaluates and discusses the quality of the stratospheric ozone analyses delivered in near real time by the MACC (Monitoring Atmospheric Composition and Climate) project during the 3-year period between September 2009 and September 2012. Ozone analyses produced by four different chemical data assimilation (CDA) systems are examined and compared: the Integrated Forecast System coupled to the Model for OZone And Related chemical Tracers (IFS-MOZART); the Belgian Assimilation System for Chemical ObsErvations (BASCOE); the Synoptic Analysis of Chemical Constituents by Advanced Data Assimilation (SACADA); and the Data Assimilation Model based on Transport Model version 3 (TM3DAM). The assimilated satellite ozone retrievals differed for each system; SACADA and TM3DAM assimilated only total ozone observations, BASCOE assimilated profiles for ozone and some related species, while IFS-MOZART assimilated both types of ozone observations. All analyses deliver total column values that agree well with ground-based observations (biases The northern spring 2011 period is studied in more detail to evaluate the ability of the analyses to represent the exceptional ozone depletion event, which happened above the Arctic in March 2011. Offline sensitivity tests are performed during this month and indicate that the differences between the forward models or the assimilation algorithms are much less important than the characteristics of the assimilated data sets. They also show that IFS-MOZART is able to deliver realistic analyses of ozone both in the troposphere and in the stratosphere, but this requires the assimilation of observations from nadir-looking instruments as well as the assimilation of profiles, which are well resolved vertically and extend into the lowermost stratosphere.