Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Apr 2018)

Dynamics and composition of the Asian summer monsoon anticyclone

  • K.-D. Gottschaldt,
  • H. Schlager,
  • R. Baumann,
  • D. S. Cai,
  • V. Eyring,
  • P. Graf,
  • V. Grewe,
  • V. Grewe,
  • P. Jöckel,
  • T. Jurkat-Witschas,
  • C. Voigt,
  • C. Voigt,
  • A. Zahn,
  • H. Ziereis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-18-5655-2018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
pp. 5655 – 5675

Abstract

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This study places HALO research aircraft observations in the upper-tropospheric Asian summer monsoon anticyclone (ASMA) into the context of regional, intra-annual variability by hindcasts with the ECHAM/MESSy Atmospheric Chemistry (EMAC) model. The observations were obtained during the Earth System Model Validation (ESMVal) campaign in September 2012. Observed and simulated tracer–tracer relations reflect photochemical O3 production as well as in-mixing from the lower troposphere and the tropopause layer. The simulations demonstrate that tropospheric trace gas profiles in the monsoon season are distinct from those in the rest of the year, and the measurements reflect the main processes acting throughout the monsoon season. Net photochemical O3 production is significantly enhanced in the ASMA, where uplifted precursors meet increased NOx, mainly produced by lightning. An analysis of multiple monsoon seasons in the simulation shows that stratospherically influenced tropopause layer air is regularly entrained at the eastern ASMA flank and then transported in the southern fringe around the interior region. Radial transport barriers of the circulation are effectively overcome by subseasonal dynamical instabilities of the anticyclone, which occur quite frequently and are of paramount importance for the trace gas composition of the ASMA. Both the isentropic entrainment of O3-rich air and the photochemical conversion of uplifted O3-poor air tend to increase O3 in the ASMA outflow.