Journal Article FZJ-2018-02881

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Tropospheric Ozone Assessment Report: Present-day distribution and trends of tropospheric ozone relevant to climate and global atmospheric chemistry model evaluation

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2018
BioOne Washington, DC

Elementa 6(1), 39 - () [10.1525/elementa.291] special issue: "Tropospheric Ozone Assessment Report (TOAR): Global metrics for climate change, human health and crop/ecosystem research"

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Abstract: The Tropospheric Ozone Assessment Report (TOAR) is an activity of the International Global Atmospheric Chemistry Project. This paper is a component of the report, focusing on the present-day distribution and trends of tropospheric ozone relevant to climate and global atmospheric chemistry model evaluation. Utilizing the TOAR surface ozone database, several figures present the global distribution and trends of daytime average ozone at 2702 non-urban monitoring sites, highlighting the regions and seasons of the world with the greatest ozone levels. Similarly, ozonesonde and commercial aircraft observations reveal ozone’s distribution throughout the depth of the free troposphere. Long-term surface observations are limited in their global spatial coverage, but data from remote locations indicate that ozone in the 21st century is greater than during the 1970s and 1980s. While some remote sites and many sites in the heavily polluted regions of East Asia show ozone increases since 2000, many others show decreases and there is no clear global pattern for surface ozone changes since 2000. Two new satellite products provide detailed views of ozone in the lower troposphere across East Asia and Europe, revealing the full spatial extent of the spring and summer ozone enhancements across eastern China that cannot be assessed from limited surface observations. Sufficient data are now available (ozonesondes, satellite, aircraft) across the tropics from South America eastwards to the western Pacific Ocean, to indicate a likely tropospheric column ozone increase since the 1990s. The 2014–2016 mean tropospheric ozone burden (TOB) between 60˚N–60˚S from five satellite products is 300 Tg ± 4%. While this agreement is excellent, the products differ in their quantification of TOB trends and further work is required to reconcile the differences. Satellites can now estimate ozone’s global long-wave radiative effect, but evaluation is difficult due to limited in situ observations where the radiative effect is greatest.

Classification:

Contributing Institute(s):
  1. Troposphäre (IEK-8)
  2. Jülich Supercomputing Center (JSC)
Research Program(s):
  1. 243 - Tropospheric trace substances and their transformation processes (POF3-243) (POF3-243)
  2. 512 - Data-Intensive Science and Federated Computing (POF3-512) (POF3-512)
  3. Earth System Data Exploration (ESDE) (ESDE)

Appears in the scientific report 2018
Database coverage:
Medline ; Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0 ; DOAJ ; OpenAccess ; BIOSIS Previews ; DOAJ Seal ; Thomson Reuters Master Journal List ; Zoological Record
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Dokumenttypen > Aufsätze > Zeitschriftenaufsätze
Institutssammlungen > ICE > ICE-3
Workflowsammlungen > Öffentliche Einträge
Institutssammlungen > JSC
IEK > IEK-8
Publikationsdatenbank
Open Access

 Datensatz erzeugt am 2018-05-11, letzte Änderung am 2024-07-12


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