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Published May 27, 2013 | Published
Journal Article Open

A link between tropical intraseasonal variability and Arctic stratospheric ozone

Abstract

Previous studies using satellite measurements showed evidence that subtropical upper troposphere/lower stratosphere ozone (O_3) can be modulated by tropical intraseasonal variability, the most dominant form of which is the Madden Julian Oscillation (MJO) with a period of 30–60 days. Here we further study the MJO modulation in the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere O_3 over the northern extratropics and the Arctic. Significant MJO-related O_3 signals (13–20 Dobson units) are found over the northern extratropics (north of 30°N). The O_3 anomalies change their magnitude and patterns depending on the phase of the MJO. Over the Arctic, the MJO-related O_3 anomalies are dominated by a wave number 2 structure and are anticorrelated with the geopotential height (GPH) anomalies at 250 hPa. The latter is similar to the findings in the previous studies over subtropics and indicates that the Arctic upper troposphere/lower stratosphere O_3 anomalies are associated with dynamical motions near the tropopause. The teleconnection from the tropics to the Arctic is likely through propagation of planetary waves generated by the equatorial heating that affects the tropopause height and O_3 at high latitudes.

Additional Information

© 2013 American Geophysical Union. Received 25 August 2012; revised 3 April 2013; accepted 4 April 2013; article first published online: 28 May 2013. K.F.L. is grateful to Prof. Simona Bordoni, Prof. Duane E. Waliser, and Dr. Xianan Jiang for their thoughtful comments. K.F.L. and Y.L.Y. were supported by National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) grant JPL-1429248 to the California Institute of Technology. B.J. was supported by National Science Foundation (NSF) award ATM-0840755 to the University of California, Los Angeles. B.L.S. was supported by NSF grant ATM-0934303. Part of this research was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with NASA. The RMM index was obtained from http://www.cawcr.gov.au/staff/mwheeler/maproom/RMM/RMM1RMM2.74toRealtime.txt.

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