A Method for Estimating the Evolution of Brewer-Dobson Circulation Upwelling
- 1Research Center Juelich, Cologne, Germany
- 2Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany
- 3German Aerospace Center, Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany
Both theory and climate model results suggest that the Brewer-Dobson circulation should strengthen in the stratosphere with increasing greenhouse gas concentrations. Directly measuring the circulation strength is not possible, so verification of this sensitivity has been limited to indirect inferences from observed tracer fields of long-lived species. These methods, however, are complex and accumulation of the data required for them is difficult. When limiting discussion to the tropical lower stratosphere, ozone concentrations have shown to be consistent with an accelerating circulation. These measurements are particularly useful because of the long timeseries available from multiple datasets, but they have only been used for indirect investigations of the circulation strength, up until now.
In this work, we invert the ozone balance equation to solve for upwelling. By limiting the investigation to 70 hPa in the southern tropics and estimating upwelling anomalies from the long-term mean (and not the absolute value of upwelling) most chemical terms and both horizontal and vertical mixing can be neglected, and calculation of the remaining terms is straight-forward. To verify the validity of the method, a calculation of upwelling is performed using climate model data, from which a comparison of actual upwelling and upwelling from the inverse method can be made. The seasonal cycle of upwelling anomalies is compared to upwelling anomalies from reanalyses and model results, and trends and variability are discussed.
How to cite: Charlesworth, E., Ploeger, F., Diallo, M., Birner, T., and Joeckel, P.: A Method for Estimating the Evolution of Brewer-Dobson Circulation Upwelling, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-8905, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-8905, 2020