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Dive into the research topics where Krzysztof Wargan is active.

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Featured researches published by Krzysztof Wargan.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

The global structure of upper troposphere‐lower stratosphere ozone in GEOS‐5: A multiyear assimilation of EOS Aura data

Krzysztof Wargan; Steven Pawson; Mark A. Olsen; Jacquelyn C. Witte; Anne R. Douglass; Jerald R. Ziemke; Susan E. Strahan; J. Eric Nielsen

Eight years of ozone measurements retrieved from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument and the Microwave Limb Sounder, both on the EOS Aura satellite, have been assimilated into the Goddard Earth Observing System Version 5 (GEOS-5) data assimilation system. This study evaluates this assimilated product, highlighting its potential for science. The impact of observations on the GEOS-5 system is explored by examining the spatial distribution of the observation-minus-forecast statistics. Independent data are used for product validation. The correlation of the lower stratospheric (the tropopause to 50 hPa) ozone column with ozonesondes is 0.99 and the (high) bias is 0.5%, indicating the success of the assimilation in reproducing the ozone variability in that layer. The upper tropospheric (500 hPa to the tropopause) assimilated ozone column is about 10% lower than the ozonesonde column, but the correlation is still high (0.87). The assimilation is shown to realistically capture the sharp cross-tropopause gradient in ozone mixing ratio. Occurrence of transport-driven low ozone laminae in the assimilation system is similar to that obtained from the High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder (HIRDLS) above the 400 K potential temperature surface, but the assimilation produces fewer laminae than seen by HIRDLS below that surface. Although the assimilation produces about 25% fewer occurrences per day during the 3 years of HIRDLS data, the interannual variability is captured correctly. This data-driven assimilated product is complementary to ozone fields generated from chemistry and transport models. Applications include study of the radiative forcing by ozone and tracer transport near the tropopause.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Assessment and applications of NASA ozone data products derived from Aura OMI/MLS satellite measurements in context of the GMI chemical transport model

J. R. Ziemke; Mark A. Olsen; Jacquelyn C. Witte; Anne R. Douglass; Susan E. Strahan; Krzysztof Wargan; Xiong Liu; M. R. Schoeberl; Kai Yang; T. B. Kaplan; Steven Pawson; Bryan N. Duncan; Paul A. Newman; Pawan K. Bhartia; M. K. Heney

Measurements from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) and Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS), both on board the Aura spacecraft, have been used to produce daily global maps of column and profile ozone since August 2004. Here we compare and evaluate three strategies to obtain daily maps of tropospheric and stratospheric ozone from OMI and MLS measurements: trajectory mapping, direct profile retrieval, and data assimilation. Evaluation is based on an assessment that includes validation using ozonesondes and comparisons with the Global Modeling Initiative (GMI) chemical transport model. We investigate applications of the three ozone data products from near-decadal and interannual time scales to day-to-day case studies. Interannual changes in zonal mean tropospheric ozone from all of the products in any latitude range are of the order 1–2 Dobson units while changes (increases) over the 8 year Aura record investigated vary by 2–4 Dobson units. It is demonstrated that all of the ozone products can measure and monitor exceptional tropospheric ozone events including major forest fire and pollution transport events. Stratospheric ozone during the Aura record has several anomalous interannual events including split stratospheric warmings in the Northern Hemisphere extratropics that are well captured using the data assimilation ozone profile product. Data assimilation with continuous daily global coverage and vertical ozone profile information is the best of the three strategies at generating a global tropospheric and stratospheric ozone product for science applications.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Frequency and impact of summertime stratospheric intrusions over Maryland during DISCOVER‐AQ (2011): New evidence from NASA's GEOS‐5 simulations

Lesley E. Ott; Bryan N. Duncan; Anne M. Thompson; Glenn S. Diskin; Zachary Fasnacht; A. O. Langford; Meiyun Lin; Andrea Molod; J. Eric Nielsen; S. E. Pusede; Krzysztof Wargan; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Yasuko Yoshida

Aircraft observations and ozonesonde profiles collected on July 14 and 27, 2011, during the Maryland month-long DISCOVER-AQ campaign, indicate the presence of stratospheric air just above the planetary boundary layer (PBL). This raises the question of whether summer stratospheric intrusions (SIs) elevate surface ozone levels and to what degree they influence background ozone levels and contribute to ozone production. We used idealized stratospheric air tracers, along with observations, to determine the frequency and extent of SIs in Maryland during July 2011. On 4 of 14 flight days, SIs were detected in layers that the aircraft encountered above the PBL from the coincidence of enhanced ozone, moderate CO, and low moisture. Satellite observations of lower tropospheric humidity confirmed the occurrence of synoptic scale influence of SIs as do simulations with the GEOS-5 Atmospheric General Circulation Model. The evolution of GEOS-5 stratospheric air tracers agree with the timing and location of observed stratospheric influence and indicate that more than 50% of air in SI layers above the PBL had resided in the stratosphere within the previous 14 days. Despite having a strong influence in the lower free troposphere, these events did not significantly affect surface ozone, which remained low on intrusion days. The model indicates similar frequencies of stratospheric influence during all summers from 2009-2013. GEOS-5 results suggest that, over Maryland, the strong inversion capping the summer PBL limits downward mixing of stratospheric air during much of the day, helping to preserve low surface ozone associated with frontal passages that precede SIs.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2018

Recent Decline in Extratropical Lower Stratospheric Ozone Attributed to Circulation Changes

Krzysztof Wargan; Clara Orbe; Steven Pawson; Jerald R. Ziemke; Luke D. Oman; Mark A. Olsen; L. Coy; K. Emma Knowland

1998-2016 ozone trends in the lower stratosphere (LS) are examined using the Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications Version 2 (MERRA-2) and related NASA products. After removing biases resulting from step-changes in the MERRA-2 ozone observations, a discernible negative trend of -1.67±0.54 Dobson units per decade (DU/decade) is found in the 10-km layer above the tropopause between 20°N and 60°N. A weaker but statistically significant trend of -1.17±0.33 DU/decade exists between 50°S and 20°S. In the Tropics, a positive trend is seen in a 5-km layer above the tropopause. Analysis of an idealized tracer in a model simulation constrained by MERRA-2 meteorological fields provides strong evidence that these trends are driven by enhanced isentropic transport between the tropical (20°S-20°N) and extratropical LS in the past two decades. This is the first time that a reanalysis dataset has been used to detect and attribute trends in lower stratospheric ozone.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

Stratospheric Intrusion‐Influenced Ozone Air Quality Exceedances Investigated in the NASA MERRA‐2 Reanalysis

K. E. Knowland; Lesley E. Ott; Bryan N. Duncan; Krzysztof Wargan

Stratospheric intrusions have been the interest of decades of research for their ability to bring stratospheric ozone (O3) into the troposphere with the potential to enhance surface O3 concentrations. However, these intrusions have been misrepresented in models and reanalyses until recently, as the features of a stratospheric intrusion are best identified in horizontal resolutions of 50 km or smaller. NASAs Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications Version-2 (MERRA-2) reanalysis is a publicly-available high-resolution dataset (~50 km) with assimilated O3 that characterizes O3 on the same spatiotemporal resolution as the meteorology. We demonstrate the science capabilities of the MERRA-2 reanalysis when applied to the evaluation of stratospheric intrusions that impact surface air quality. This is demonstrated through a case study analysis of stratospheric intrusion-influenced O3 exceedences in spring 2012 in Colorado, using a combination of observations, the MERRA-2 reanalysis and the Goddard Earth Observing System Model, Version 5 (GEOS-5) simulations.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Multiyear Composite View of Ozone Enhancements and Stratosphere‐to‐Troposphere Transport in Dry Intrusions of Northern Hemisphere Extratropical Cyclones

Lyatt Jaeglé; Robert Wood; Krzysztof Wargan

We examine the role of extratropical cyclones in stratosphere-to-troposphere (STT) exchange with cyclone-centric composites of O3 retrievals from the Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) and the Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer (TES), contrasting them to composites obtained with the Modern-Era Retrospective-analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA and MERRA-2) reanalyses and the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model. We identify 15,978 extratropical cyclones in the northern hemisphere (NH) for 2005-2012. The lowermost stratosphere (261 hPa) and middle troposphere (424 hPa) composites feature a 1,000 km-wide O3 enhancement in the dry intrusion (DI) airstream to the southwest of the cyclone center, coinciding with a lowered tropopause, enhanced potential vorticity, and decreased H2O. MLS composites at 261 hPa show that the DI O3 enhancements reach a 210 ppbv maximum in April. At 424 hPa, TES composites display maximum O3 enhancements of 27 ppbv in May. The magnitude and seasonality of these enhancements are captured by MERRA and MERRA-2, but GEOS-Chem is a factor of two too low. The MERRA-2 composites show that the O3-rich DI forms a vertically aligned structure between 300 and 800 hPa, wrapping cyclonically with the warm conveyor belt. In winter and spring DIs, O3 is enhanced by 100 ppbv or 100-130% at 300 hPa, with significant enhancements below 500 hPa (6-20 ppbv or 15-30%). We estimate that extratropical cyclones result in a STT flux of 119±56 Tg O3 yr-1, accounting for 42±20 % of the NH extratropical O3 STT flux. The STT flux in cyclones displays a strong dependence on westerly 300 hPa wind speeds.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Introduction to the SPARC Reanalysis Intercomparison Project (S-RIP) and overview of the reanalysis systems

Masatomo Fujiwara; Jonathon S. Wright; G. L. Manney; Lesley J. Gray; James Anstey; Thomas Birner; Sean M. Davis; Edwin P. Gerber; V. Lynn Harvey; M. I. Hegglin; Cameron R. Homeyer; John A. Knox; Kirstin Krüger; Alyn Lambert; Craig S. Long; Patrick Martineau; Andrea Molod; B. M. Monge-Sanz; Michelle L. Santee; Susann Tegtmeier; Simon Chabrillat; David G. H. Tan; D. R. Jackson; Saroja Polavarapu; Gilbert P. Compo; Rossana Dragani; Wesley Ebisuzaki; Yayoi Harada; Chiaki Kobayashi; Will McCarty


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

Assessment of upper tropospheric and stratospheric water vapor and ozone in reanalyses as part of S-RIP

Sean M. Davis; M. I. Hegglin; Masatomo Fujiwara; Rossana Dragani; Yayoi Harada; Chiaki Kobayashi; Craig S. Long; G. L. Manney; Eric R. Nash; Gerald Potter; Susann Tegtmeier; Tao Wang; Krzysztof Wargan; Jonathon S. Wright


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

Causes of interannual variability over the southern hemispheric tropospheric ozone maximum

Junhua Liu; Jose M. Rodriguez; Stephen D. Steenrod; Anne R. Douglass; Jennifer A. Logan; Mark A. Olsen; Krzysztof Wargan; Jerald R. Ziemke


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

The Ozone Monitoring Instrument: overview of 14 years in space

Pieternel F. Levelt; Joanna Joiner; J. Tamminen; J. P. Veefkind; Pawan K. Bhartia; Deborah Stein Zweers; Bryan N. Duncan; David G. Streets; Henk Eskes; Ronald A J Stavenuiter; Chris A. McLinden; Vitali E. Fioletov; Simon A. Carn; Jos de Laat; Matthew T. DeLand; Sergey Marchenko; Richard D. McPeters; J. R. Ziemke; Dejian Fu; Xiong Liu; Kenneth E. Pickering; Arnoud Apituley; Gonzalo González Abad; Antti Arola; K. Folkert Boersma; Christopher Miller; Kelly Chance; M. de Graaf; Janne Hakkarainen; S. Hassinen

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Steven Pawson

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Anne R. Douglass

Goddard Space Flight Center

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J. Eric Nielsen

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Andrea Molod

Goddard Space Flight Center

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G. L. Manney

New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology

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Lesley E. Ott

Goddard Space Flight Center

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