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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 100, NO. D4,
PAGES 7347–7361,
1995
Observational study of the quasi-biennial oscillation in ozone
Stacey M. Hollandsworth
Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana
Kenneth P. Bowman
Department of Meteorology, Texas A&M University, College Station
Richard D. McPeters
NASA, Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland
Abstract
The structures of the quasi-biennial oscillations (QBOs) in zonal wind, temperature, and layer ozone amounts are investigated
using 11.5 years (January 1979 to June 1990) of National Meteorological Center (NMC) global geopotential height data and global
ozone data from the solar backscatter ultraviolet spectrometer (SBUV) on Nimbus 7. The QBO signals are isolated by computing
lagged correlations between the deseasonalized, detrended variable fields and a reference signal representative of the equatorial
QBO. Lagged correlations are calculated for the full time series and for each season separately to determine seasonal effects.
The results depict an equatorial zonal wind QBO in good agreement with the observed QBO in ground-based equatorial zonal wind
measurements, although the amplitude of the derived QBO in the NMC data is ∼30% too weak. The vertical extent of the oscillation
is significantly higher (2 mbar) than that previously reported. The temperature QBO is consistent with ground-based observations
in the lower stratosphere but weakens with height above ∼50 mbar. The ozone QBO is strong at all levels from 5 mbar into the
lower stratosphere. Though the annual average total ozone QBO is quite symmetric about the equator, the oscillation is highly
variable from layer to layer. The phase of the ozone QBO near the equator is consistent with that of the zonal wind and temperature
in the middle and upper stratosphere, but the vertical resolution of the SBUV data in the lower stratosphere is too low to
accurately represent the vertical phase of the ozone QBO in this region. Subtropical temperature and total ozone anomalies
are found to be dependent on season.
Received 8
November
1993;
accepted 7
January
1995.
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Citation: Hollandsworth, S. M., K. P. Bowman, and R. D. McPeters
(1995),
Observational study of the quasi-biennial oscillation in ozone,
J. Geophys. Res.,
100(D4),
7347–7361.
Copyright 1995 by the American Geophysical Union.
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