Title
Stable Water Isotopologues in the Stratosphere Retrieved from Odin/SMR Measurements.
Abstract
Stable Water Isotopologues (SWIs) are important diagnostic tracers for understanding processes in the atmosphere and the global hydrological cycle. Using eight years (2002-2009) of retrievals from Odin/SMR (Sub-Millimetre Radiometer), the global climatological features of three SWIs, (H2O)-O-16, HDO and (H2O)-O-18, the isotopic composition D and O-18 in the stratosphere are analysed for the first time. Spatially, SWIs are found to increase with altitude due to stratospheric methane oxidation. In the tropics, highly depleted SWIs in the lower stratosphere indicate the effect of dehydration when the air comes through the cold tropopause, while, at higher latitudes, more enriched SWIs in the upper stratosphere during summer are produced and transported to the other hemisphere via the Brewer-Dobson circulation. Furthermore, we found that more (H2O)-O-16 is produced over summer Northern Hemisphere and more HDO is produced over summer Southern Hemisphere. Temporally, a tape recorder in (H2O)-O-16 is observed in the lower tropical stratosphere, in addition to a pronounced downward propagating seasonal signal in SWIs from the upper to the lower stratosphere over the polar regions. These observed features in SWIs are further compared to SWI-enabled model outputs. This helped to identify possible causes of model deficiencies in reproducing main stratospheric features. For instance, choosing a better advection scheme and including methane oxidation process in a specific model immediately capture the main features of stratospheric water vapor. The representation of other features, such as the observed inter-hemispheric difference of isotopic component, is also discussed.
Year
DOI
Venue
2018
10.3390/rs10020166
REMOTE SENSING
Keywords
Field
DocType
stable water isotopologues,stratosphere,climatology,Odin,SMR satellite data
Tropopause,Stratosphere,Atmosphere,Northern Hemisphere,Remote sensing,δ18O,Atmospheric sciences,Geology,Water cycle,Water vapor,Southern Hemisphere
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
10
2
2072-4292
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
0
Authors
7
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Tong-Mei Wang1152.56
Qiong Zhang200.34
Stefan Lossow300.34
Léon Chafik400.34
Camille Risi500.34
Donal Murtagh600.34
Abdel Hannachi720.90