https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/23/687/2023/

*Authors*
Ewa M. Bednarz, Daniele Visioni, Ben Kravitz, Andy Jones, James M.
Haywood, Jadwiga Richter, Douglas G. MacMartin, and Peter Braesicke

*Date of Publication: 16 Jan 2023*

Atmos. Chem. Phys., 23, 687–709, 2023

https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-23-687-2023

*Abstract*

The paper constitutes Part 2 of a study performing a first systematic
inter-model comparison of the atmospheric responses to stratospheric
aerosol injection (SAI) at various single latitudes in the tropics, as
simulated by three state-of-the-art Earth system models – CESM2-WACCM6,
UKESM1.0, and GISS-E2.1-G. Building on Part 1 (Visioni et al., 2023) we
demonstrate the role of biases in the climatological circulation and
specific aspects of the model microphysics in driving the inter-model
differences in the simulated sulfate distributions. We then characterize
the simulated changes in stratospheric and free-tropospheric temperatures,
ozone, water vapor, and large-scale circulation, elucidating the role of
the above aspects in the surface SAI responses discussed in Part 1.

We show that the differences in the aerosol spatial distribution can be
explained by the significantly faster shallow branches of the Brewer–Dobson
circulation in CESM2, a relatively isolated tropical pipe and older
tropical age of air in UKESM, and smaller aerosol sizes and relatively
stronger horizontal mixing (thus very young stratospheric age of air) in
the two GISS versions used. We also find a large spread in the magnitudes
of the tropical lower-stratospheric warming amongst the models, driven by
microphysical, chemical, and dynamical differences. These lead to large
differences in stratospheric water vapor responses, with significant
increases in stratospheric water vapor under SAI in CESM2 and GISS that
were largely not reproduced in UKESM. For ozone, good agreement was found
in the tropical stratosphere amongst the models with more complex
microphysics, with lower stratospheric ozone changes consistent with the
SAI-induced modulation of the large-scale circulation and the resulting
changes in transport. In contrast, we find a large inter-model spread in
the Antarctic ozone responses that can largely be explained by the
differences in the simulated latitudinal distributions of aerosols as well
as the degree of implementation of heterogeneous halogen chemistry on
sulfate in the models.

The use of GISS runs with bulk microphysics demonstrates the importance of
more detailed treatment of aerosol processes, with contrastingly different
stratospheric SAI responses to the models using the two-moment aerosol
treatment; however, some problems in halogen chemistry in GISS are also
identified that require further attention. Overall, our results contribute
to an increased understanding of the underlying physical mechanisms as well
as identifying and narrowing the uncertainty in model projections of
climate impacts from SAI.

*Source: European Geosciences Union*

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