4.6 Article

Toward a chemical reanalysis in a coupled chemistry-climate model: An evaluation of MOPITT CO assimilation and its impact on tropospheric composition

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES
Volume 121, Issue 12, Pages 7310-7343

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2016JD024863

Keywords

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Funding

  1. INSU-CNRS (France)
  2. Meteo-France
  3. CNES
  4. Universite Paul Sabatier (Toulouse, France)
  5. Research Center Julich (FZJ, Julich, Germany)
  6. EU
  7. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
  8. NSF Office of Polar Programs (OPP)
  9. Danish Meteorological Institute
  10. Australian Research Council [DP110101948, LE0668470]
  11. European Commission
  12. Max Planck Society
  13. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo
  14. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico (Instituto do Milenio LBA)
  15. National Science Foundation
  16. National Science Foundation [Computational and Information Systems Laboratory]
  17. Office of Science (BER) of the U.S. Department of Energy
  18. NASA
  19. NASA [NNX13AK24G, NNX14AN47G]
  20. NASA [678352, NNX13AK24G, 471695, NNX14AN47G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
  21. Australian Research Council [LE0668470] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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We examine in detail a 1 year global reanalysis of carbon monoxide (CO) that is based on joint assimilation of conventional meteorological observations and Measurement of Pollution in The Troposphere (MOPITT) multispectral CO retrievals in the Community Earth System Model (CESM). Our focus is to assess the impact to the chemical system when CO distribution is constrained in a coupled full chemistry-climate model like CESM. To do this, we first evaluate the joint reanalysis (MOPITT Reanalysis) against four sets of independent observations and compare its performance against a reanalysis with no MOPITT assimilation (Control Run). We then investigate the CO burden and chemical response with the aid of tagged sectoral CO tracers. We estimate the total tropospheric CO burden in 2002 (from ensemble mean and spread) to be 371 +/- 12% Tg for MOPITT Reanalysis and 291 +/- 9% Tg for Control Run. Our multispecies analysis of this difference suggests that (a) direct emissions of CO and hydrocarbons are too low in the inventory used in this study and (b) chemical oxidation, transport, and deposition processes are not accurately and consistently represented in the model. Increases in CO led to net reduction of OH and subsequent longer lifetime of CH4 (Control Run: 8.7 years versus MOPITT Reanalysis: 9.3 years). Yet at the same time, this increase led to 5-10% enhancement of Northern Hemisphere O-3 and overall photochemical activity via HOx recycling. Such nonlinear effects further complicate the attribution to uncertainties in direct emissions alone. This has implications to chemistry- climate modeling and inversion studies of longer-lived species.

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