Articles | Volume 4, issue 5
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-4-1407-2004
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-4-1407-2004
27 Aug 2004
27 Aug 2004

Investigation of Arctic ozone depletion sampled over midlatitudes during the Egrett campaign of spring/summer 2000

D. E. M. Ross, J. A. Pyle, N. R. P. Harris, J. D. McIntyre, G. A. Millard, A. D. Robinson, and R. Busen

Abstract. A unique halocarbon dataset has been obtained using the Australian high altitude research aircraft, the Grob G520T Egrett, during May-June 2000 with GC instrument (DIRAC), which has been previously deployed on balloon platforms. The halocarbon data generally shows a good anticorrelation with ozone data obtained simultaneously from commercial sensors. On 5 June 2000, at 380K, the Egrett entered a high latitude tongue of air over the U.K. CFC-11 and O3 data obtained on the flight show evidence of this feature. The dataset has been used, in conjunction with a 3D chemical transport model, to infer ozone depletion encountered in the midlatitude lower stratosphere during the flight. We calculate that ozone is depleted by 20% relative to its winter value in the higher latitude airmass. A suite of ozone loss tracers in the model have been used to track ozone depletion according to location relative to the vortex and chemical cycle responsible. The model, initialised on 9 December, indicates that 50% of the total chemical ozone destruction encountered in June in the middle latitudes occurred in the 90-70°N equivalent latitude band and that 70% was due to halogen chemistry.

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