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Long-range correlations in Fourier transform infrared, satellite, and modeled CO in the Southern Hemisphere

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posted on 2024-11-15, 12:16 authored by Olaf Morgenstern, Guang Zeng, Stephen W Wood, John Robinson, Dan Smale, Helen MurphyHelen Murphy, Nicholas JonesNicholas Jones, David GriffithDavid Griffith
We use Fourier transfonn infrared ground-based measurements and satellite and model data to assess long-range correlations in tropospheric carbon monoxide. We fmd that CO columns measured in New Zealand correlate well with those measured in Antarctica, if a transport-related lag is taken into account. The model suggests that this long-range correlation is part of a mode of anomalous CO comprising almost the whole southern extratropics, which is linked to biomass burning in the southern continents. No such mode is modeled for the Northern Hemisphere. The area of long-range correlations maximizes for the southern subtropical Pacific, which is identified as an advantageous location for a hypothetical new measurement station. The satellite data (produced by the Measurements of Pollution in the Troposphere (MOPlTT) instrument) partially confinn these fmdings but with generally reduced correlations. In particular, the satellite data suggest no long-range correlation at high latitudes. This is partially explained in terms of retrieval limitations and partially reflects a model deficiency.

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Citation

Morgenstern, O., Zeng, G., Wood, S. W., Robinson, J., Smale, D., Paton-Walsh, C., Jones, N. B. & Griffith, D. W. T. (2012). Long-range correlations in Fourier transform infrared, satellite, and modeled CO in the Southern Hemisphere. Journal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres, 117 (11), D11301.

Journal title

Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres

Volume

117

Issue

11

Language

English

RIS ID

59316

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