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Published January 27, 2022 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Multi‐Season Evaluation of CO₂ Weather in OCO-2 MIP Models

Abstract

The ability of current global models to simulate the transport of CO₂ by mid-latitude, synoptic-scale weather systems (i.e., CO₂ weather) is important for inverse estimates of regional and global carbon budgets but remains unclear without comparisons to targeted measurements. Here, we evaluate ten models that participated in the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 model intercomparison project (OCO-2 MIP version 9) with intensive aircraft measurements collected from the Atmospheric Carbon Transport (ACT)-America mission. We quantify model-data differences in the spatial variability of CO₂ mole fractions, mean winds, and boundary layer depths in 27 mid-latitude cyclones spanning four seasons over the central and eastern United States. We find that the OCO-2 MIP models are able to simulate observed CO₂ frontal differences with varying degrees of success in summer and spring, and most underestimate frontal differences in winter and autumn. The models may underestimate the observed boundary layer-to-free troposphere CO₂ differences in spring and autumn due to model errors in boundary layer height. Attribution of the causes of model biases in other seasons remains elusive. Transport errors, prior fluxes, and/or inversion algorithms appear to be the primary cause of these biases since model performance is not highly sensitive to the CO₂ data used in the inversion. The metrics presented here provide new benchmarks regarding the ability of atmospheric inversion systems to reproduce the CO₂ structure of mid-latitude weather systems. Controlled experiments are needed to link these metrics more directly to the accuracy of regional or global flux estimates.

Additional Information

© 2022. American Geophysical Union. Issue Online: 10 January 2022. Version of Record online: 10 January 2022. Accepted manuscript online: 06 January 2022. Manuscript accepted: 29 December 2021. Manuscript revised: 14 December 2021. Manuscript received: 08 July 2021. This article also appears in: Carbon Weather: Toward the Next Generation of Regional Greenhouse Gas Inversion Systems. This study was funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) under the following awards: NNX15AG76G to Penn State (Davis); NNX15AJ07G to Colorado State (Baker and Schuh); 80NSSC19K0730 to Texas Tech and a Texas Tech faculty start-up grant (Pal); and 80NM0018D0004 to Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Caltech (Liu). Additional support for research was provided by NASA Grants NNX12AP90G (Davis) and NNX14AJ17G (Davis). Co-author Johnson acknowledges the internal funding from NASA's Earth Science Research and Analysis Program and co-author Philip acknowledges financial support of the NASA Academic Mission Services by Universities Space Research Association at NASA Ames Research Center. The ORNL DAAC is sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration under Interagency Agreement 80GSFC19T0039. ORNL participation in ACT-America was funded by Interagency Agreement NNL15AA10I. The statements, findings, and conclusions are those of the author(s) and should not be construed as the views of the agencies. We thank NASA Headquarters and NASA's Airborne Sciences Program and Earth System Science Pathfinder Program Office for their support of the ACT-America mission. We are also grateful to the ACT data management team at NASA LaRC and ORNL for their work, and to the ACT flight and instrument crews for their extensive field work. The authors declare no conflicts of interest relevant to this study. Data Availability Statement. The ACT-American data is publicly available at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) Distributed Active Archive Center (https://daac.ornl.gov/actamerica). OCO-2 MIP model results are available at https://www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/ccgg/OCO2/.

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Published - 2021JD035457.pdf

Supplemental Material - 2021JD035457-si.docx

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Additional details

Created:
October 9, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023