4.7 Article

Surface Ozone-Temperature Relationship: The Meridional Gradient Ratio Approximation

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 49, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2022GL098680

Keywords

ozone; tracer transport; air quality; climate change

Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation [AGS-1902409]
  2. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) [80NSSC19K1271]

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Ground-level ozone (O-3) is positively correlated with air temperature (T) and the ozone-climate change penalty (dO(3)/dT) can be used to predict the impact of climate warming on O-3. The spatial variation of dO(3)/dT is determined by simultaneous meridional advection of O-3 and T and can be approximated by their climatological meridional gradient ratio. Climate change is likely to affect dO(3)/dT due to changes in meridional gradients of T and O-3.
The daily variation of ground-level ozone (O-3), a harmful pollutant, is positively correlated with air temperature (T) in many midlatitude land regions in the summer. The observed temporal regression slope between O-3 and T (dO(3)/dT) is referred to as the ozone-climate change penalty and has been proposed as a way to predict the impact of future climate warming on O-3 from observations. Here, we use two chemical transport models to show that the spatial variation of dO(3)/dT is primarily determined by simultaneous meridional advection of O-3 and T. Furthermore, the sign and magnitude of dO(3)/dT can be approximated by their climatological meridional gradient ratio (O-3 gradient divided by T gradient). Consideration of expected changes in the meridional gradients of T and O-3 due to climate change indicates that dO(3)/dT will likely change. Caution is needed when using the observed climate penalty to predict O-3 changes.

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