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Title: Simulations of the trend and annual cycle in stratospheric CO{sub 2}

Journal Article · · Journal of Geophysical Research
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1029/93JD00325· OSTI ID:107559
 [1];  [2]
  1. NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, New York, NY (United States)
  2. Univ. of California, Irvine, CA (United States)

The distribution and evolution of stratospheric CO{sub 2} in response to the observed annual cycle, interannual variations, and long-term trends in tropospheric CO{sub 2} is simulated with the GISS 23 layer stratospheric general circulation model. Carbon dioxide is a tracer of stratospheric transport which has essentially no local sources or sinks but still displays gradients due to the forcing at the surface. Consequently, observations of stratospheric CO{sub 2}, until recently limited to a few flask samples, but now included as a high frequency in situ sampling in aircraft campaigns, provide a test of tracer transport in stratospheric simulations independent of model chemistry. In the authors model, CO{sub 2} enters the stratosphere primarily through the tropical tropopause, where air parcels are effectively labeled in time by their CO{sub 2} values (although not uniquely because of the cycles in the tropospheric concentration). Parcels of differing ages are subsequently mixed in the stratosphere. Only when the growth is purely linear can the CO{sub 2} offset in a parcel relative to the troposphere be interpreted as the average time since stratospheric air was last in contact with the troposphere, i.e., the {open_quotes}age{close_quotes} of the stratosphere. This model is in qualitative agreement with multiyear averages of balloon soundings at northern mid- and high latitudes; the stratosphere at 30 km at mid-latitudes is about 4 years (6 ppm of CO{sub 2}) behind the troposphere. The authors predict significant propagation of the CO{sub 2} annual cycle into the lower stratosphere, an effect which must be accounted for when interpreting observations. While the annual cycle is negligible above the lower stratosphere, interannual oscillations, such as those associated with El Ninos, can propagate well into the middle stratosphere as positive offsets from the linear trend lasting significantly longer than their duration in the troposphere. 30 refs., 9 figs.

Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
OSTI ID:
107559
Journal Information:
Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 98, Issue D6; Other Information: PBD: 20 Jun 1993
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

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