4.7 Article

Assessing and improving cloud-height-based parameterisations of global lightning flash rate, and their impact on lightning-produced NOx and tropospheric composition in a chemistry-climate model

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
Volume 21, Issue 9, Pages 7053-7082

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/acp-21-7053-2021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian government
  2. New Zealand Deep South National Science Challenge

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Lightning-generated oxides of nitrogen (LNOx) play a significant role in tropospheric photochemistry. Existing global composition models often underestimate LNOx due to inaccuracies in parameterisations for lightning flash rates, especially over the ocean. New parameterisations based on storm geometry show improved accuracy in simulating flash-rate observations, leading to better estimates of LNOx and related atmospheric components.
Although lightning-generated oxides of nitrogen (LNOx) account for only approximately 10 % of the global NOx source, they have a disproportionately large impact on tropospheric photochemistry due to the conducive conditions in the tropical upper troposphere where lightning is mostly discharged. In most global composition models, lightning flash rates used to calculate LNOx are expressed in terms of convective cloud-top height via the Price and Rind (1992) (PR92) parameterisations for land and ocean, where the oceanic parameterisation is known to greatly underestimate flash rates. We conduct a critical assessment of flash-rate parameterisations that are based on cloud-top height and validate them within the Australian Community Climate and Earth System Simulator - United Kingdom Chemistry and Aerosol (ACCESS-UKCA) global chemistry-climate model using the Lightning Imaging Sensor and Optical Transient Detector (LIS/OTD) satellite data. While the PR92 parameterisation for land yields satisfactory predictions, the oceanic parameterisation, as expected, underestimates the observed flash-rate density severely, yielding a global average over the ocean of 0.33 flashes s(-1) compared to the observed 9.16 flashes s(-1) and leading to LNOx being underestimated proportionally. We formulate new flash-rate parameterisations following Boccippio's (2002) scaling relationships between thunderstorm electrical generator power and storm geometry coupled with available data. The new parameterisation for land performs very similarly to the corresponding PR92 one, as would be expected, whereas the new oceanic parameterisation simulates the flash-rate observations much more accurately, giving a global average over the ocean of 8.84 flashes s(-1). The use of the improved flash-rate parameterisations in ACCESS-UKCA changes the modelled tropospheric composition - global LNOx increases from 4.8 to 6.6 Tg N yr(-1); the ozone (O-3) burden increases by 8.5 %; there is an increase in the mid- to upper-tropospheric NOx by as much as 40 pptv, a 13 % increase in the global hydroxyl radical (OH), a decrease in the methane lifetime by 6.7 %, and a decrease in the lower-tropospheric carbon monoxide (CO) by 3 %-7 %. Compared to observations, the modelled tropospheric NOx and ozone in the Southern Hemisphere and over the ocean are improved by this new flash-rate parameterisation.

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