Direct and ozone-mediated forcing of the Southern Annular Mode by greenhouse gases

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Abstract

We assess the roles of long-lived greenhouse gases and ozone depletion in driving meridional surface pressure gradients in the southern extratropics; these gradients are a defining feature of the Southern Annular Mode. Stratospheric ozone depletion is thought to have caused a strengthening of this mode during summer, with increasing long-lived greenhouse gases playing a secondary role. Using a coupled atmosphere-ocean chemistry-climate model, we show that there is cancelation between the direct, radiative effect of increasing greenhouse gases by the also substantial indirect - chemical and dynamical - feedbacks that greenhouse gases have via their impact on ozone. This sensitivity of the mode to greenhouse gas-induced ozone changes suggests that a consistent implementation of ozone changes due to long-lived greenhouse gases in climate models benefits the simulation of this important aspect of Southern Hemisphere climate. Key Points The ozone-mediated impact of GHGs on the summer SAM offsets the direct effectIn climate simulations prescribed ozone needs to be consistent with GHG forcing

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Morgenstern, O., Zeng, G., Dean, S. M., Joshi, M., Abraham, N. L., & Osprey, A. (2014). Direct and ozone-mediated forcing of the Southern Annular Mode by greenhouse gases. Geophysical Research Letters, 41(24), 9050–9057. https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GL062140

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