Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Radiative forcing in the 21st century due to oz...

Electronic data

  • 2002JD002624

    Rights statement: Copyright 2003 by the American Geophysical Union

    Final published version, 1.32 MB, PDF document

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Radiative forcing in the 21st century due to ozone changes in the troposphere and the lower stratosphere

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published
  • M Gauss
  • G Myhre
  • G Pitari
  • M J Prather
  • I S A Isaksen
  • T K Berntsen
  • G P Brasseur
  • F J Dentener
  • R G Derwent
  • D A Hauglustaine
  • L W Horowitz
  • D J Jacob
  • M Johnson
  • K S Law
  • L J Mickley
  • J F Muller
  • P H Plantevin
  • J A Pyle
  • H L Rogers
  • D S Stevenson
  • J K Sundet
  • M van Weele
Close
Article number4292
<mark>Journal publication date</mark>13/05/2003
<mark>Journal</mark>Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Issue numberD9
Volume108
Number of pages21
Pages (from-to)-
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

Radiative forcing due to changes in ozone is expected for the 21st century. An assessment on changes in the tropospheric oxidative state through a model intercomparison ("OxComp'') was conducted for the IPCC Third Assessment Report (IPCC-TAR). OxComp estimated tropospheric changes in ozone and other oxidants during the 21st century based on the "SRES'' A2p emission scenario. In this study we analyze the results of 11 chemical transport models (CTMs) that participated in OxComp and use them as input for detailed radiative forcing calculations. We also address future ozone recovery in the lower stratosphere and its impact on radiative forcing by applying two models that calculate both tropospheric and stratospheric changes. The results of OxComp suggest an increase in global-mean tropospheric ozone between 11.4 and 20.5 DU for the 21st century, representing the model uncertainty range for the A2p scenario. As the A2p scenario constitutes the worst case proposed in IPCC-TAR we consider these results as an upper estimate. The radiative transfer model yields a positive radiative forcing ranging from 0.40 to 0.78 W m(-2) on a global and annual average. The lower stratosphere contributes an additional 7.5-9.3 DU to the calculated increase in the ozone column, increasing radiative forcing by 0.15-0.17 W m(-2). The modeled radiative forcing depends on the height distribution and geographical pattern of predicted ozone changes and shows a distinct seasonal variation. Despite the large variations between the 11 participating models, the calculated range for normalized radiative forcing is within 25%, indicating the ability to scale radiative forcing to global-mean ozone column change.