The Antarctic atmospheric energy budget. Part II: The effect of ozone depletion and its projected recovery

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Abstract

In this study the authors continue their investigation of the atmospheric energy budget of the Antarctic polar cap (the region poleward of 708S) using integrations of the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model from the years 1960 to 2065. In agreement with observational data, it is found that the climatological mean net top-of-atmosphere (TOA) radiative flux is primarily balanced by the horizontal energy flux convergence over the polar cap. On interannual time scales, changes in the net TOA radiative flux are also primarily balanced by changes in the energy flux convergence, with the variability in both terms significantly correlated (positively and negatively, respectively) with the southern annular mode (SAM). On multidecadal time scales, twentieth-century stratospheric ozone depletion produces a negative trend in the net TOA radiative flux due to a decrease in the absorbed solar radiation within the atmosphere-surface column. The negative trend in the net TOA radiative flux is balanced by a positive trend in energy flux convergence, primarily in austral summer. This negative (positive) trend in the net TOA radiation (energy flux convergence) occurs despite a positive trend in the SAM, suggesting that the effects of the SAM on the energy budget are overwhelmed by the direct radiative effects of ozone depletion. In the twenty-first century, ozone recovery is expected to reverse the negative trend in the net TOA radiative flux, which would then, again, be balanced by a decrease in the energy flux convergence. Therefore, over the next several decades, ozone recovery will, in all likelihood, mask the effect of greenhouse gas warming on the Antarctic energy budget. © 2013 American Meteorological Society.

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Smith, K. L., Previdi, M., & Polvani, L. M. (2013). The Antarctic atmospheric energy budget. Part II: The effect of ozone depletion and its projected recovery. Journal of Climate, 26(24), 9729–9744. https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-13-00173.1

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