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|a Lickley, Megan
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|a Solomon, Susan
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|a Kinnison, Doug
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|a Krummel, Paul
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|a Mühle, Jens
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|a O'Doherty, Simon
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|a Prinn, Ronald
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|a Rigby, Matthew
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|a Stone, Kane A.
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|a Wang, Peidong
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|a Weiss, Ray
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|a Young, Dickon
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|a Quantifying the Imprints of Stratospheric Contributions to Interhemispheric Differences in Tropospheric CFC‐11, CFC‐12, and N 2 O Abundances
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|b American Geophysical Union (AGU),
|c 2022-02-16T18:36:38Z.
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|z Get fulltext
|u https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/140433
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|a For trace gases destroyed in the stratosphere, mass flux across the tropopause can substantially influence observed surface hemispheric differences (NH-SH). Here, we quantify associations between observed stratospheric and tropospheric NH-SH growth rate anomalies of CFC-11, CFC-12, and N2O. We employ a chemistry climate model along with satellite and global surface station observations. Our model explains 60% of observed N2O NH-SH growth rate variability from 2005 to 2019, compared to 30% for CFC-11% and 40% for CFC-12, supporting evidence that unexpected anthropogenic emissions caused sustained positive NH-SH anomalies in these CFCs from 2012 to 2017. Between 2012 and 2015, the observed CFC-11 NH-SH difference grew by 1.7 ppt; our model explains 0.5 ± 0.1 ppt of this growth, but not the duration. Our model suggests that in the absence of further emission anomalies, new NH-SH positive tracer anomalies should have occurred in 2020, and predicts small negative anomalies in 2021.
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|a en
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|a Article
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|t Geophysical Research Letters
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