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Development of the adjoint of the unified tropospheric-stratospheric chemistry extension (UCX) in GEOS-Chem adjoint v36

Geoscientific Model Development, ISSN: 1991-9603, Vol: 17, Issue: 14, Page: 5689-5703
2024
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  • Mentions
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    • News Mentions
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Most Recent News

Research Reports from Delft University of Technology Provide New Insights into Geology [Development of the adjoint of the unified tropospheric-stratospheric chemistry extension (UCX) in GEOS-Chem adjoint v36]

2024 AUG 14 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at NewsRx Science Daily -- Data detailed on geology have been presented. According to

Article Description

Atmospheric sensitivities (gradients), quantifying the atmospheric response to emissions or other perturbations, can provide meaningful insights on the underlying atmospheric chemistry or transport processes. Atmospheric adjoint modeling enables the calculation of receptor-oriented sensitivities of model outputs of interest to input parameters (e.g., emissions), overcoming the numerical cost of conventional (forward) modeling. The adjoint of the GEOS-Chem atmospheric chemistry-transport model is a widely used such model, but prior to v36 it lacked extensive stratospheric capabilities. Here, we present the development and evaluation of the discrete adjoint of the global chemistry-transport model (CTM) GEOS-Chem unified chemistry extension (UCX) for stratospheric applications, which extends the existing capabilities of the GEOS-Chem adjoint to enable the calculation of sensitivities that include stratospheric chemistry and interactions. This development adds 37 new tracers, 273 kinetic and photolysis reactions, an updated photolysis scheme, treatment of stratospheric aerosols, and all other features described in the original UCX paper. With this development the GEOS-Chem adjoint model is able to capture the spatial, temporal, and speciated variability in stratospheric ozone depletion processes, among other processes. We demonstrate its use by calculating 2-week sensitivities of stratospheric ozone to precursor species and show that the adjoint captures the Antarctic ozone depletion potential of active halogen species, including the chlorine activation and deactivation process. The spatial variations in the sensitivity of stratospheric ozone to NOx emissions are also described. This development expands the scope of research questions that can be addressed by allowing stratospheric interactions and feedbacks to be considered in the tropospheric sensitivity and inversion applications.

Bibliographic Details

Irene C. Dedoussi; Daven K. Henze; Sebastian D. Eastham; Raymond L. Speth; Steven R. H. Barrett

Copernicus GmbH

Mathematics; Earth and Planetary Sciences

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