Publication | Open Access
The existence of a tertiary ozone maximum in the high‐latitude middle mesosphere
103
Citations
8
References
2001
Year
ClimatologyMeteorologyUpper AtmosphereAtmospheric RadiationHigh‐latitude Middle MesosphereEngineeringAtmospheric InteractionAtmospheric ScienceAtmospheric PhotochemistryPolar Night TerminatorWater VaporTertiary Ozone MaximumOzoneLower AtmosphereSpace WeatherOzone Layer DepletionClimate Dynamics
Modeling and observations provide evidence of the existence of a tertiary ozone maximum in the middle mesosphere restricted to winter high‐latitudes. This local maximum occurs at approximately 72 km altitude, at latitudes just equatorward of the polar night terminator. Model analysis indicates that this maximum is the result of a decrease in atomic oxygen losses by catalytic cycles involving the odd‐hydrogen species OH and HO 2 . In the middle mesosphere, at high latitudes, the atmosphere becomes optically thick to ultra‐violet radiation at wavelengths below 185 nm. Since photolysis of water vapor is the primary source of odd‐hydrogen, reduced ultra‐violet radiation results in less odd‐hydrogen and consequently lower oxygen loss rates. The consequent increase in atomic oxygen results in higher ozone because atomic oxygen recombination remains the only significant source of ozone in the mesosphere.
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