4.5 Article

Effect of O3 on the atmospheric temperature structure of early Mars

Journal

ICARUS
Volume 257, Issue -, Pages 406-416

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.icarus.2015.05.028

Keywords

Mars, atmosphere; Mars, climate; Atmospheres, structure; Atmospheres, composition

Funding

  1. French State in the frame of the Investments for the future Programme IdEx Bordeaux [ANR-10-IDEX-03-02]
  2. Helmholtz Gemeinschaft (HGF)

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Ozone is an important radiative trace gas in the Earth's atmosphere and has also been detected on Venus and Mars. The presence of ozone can significantly influence the thermal structure of an atmosphere due to absorption of stellar UV radiation, and by this e.g. cloud formation. Photochemical studies suggest that ozone can form in carbon dioxide-rich atmospheres. Therefore, we investigate the effect of ozone on the temperature structure of simulated early martian atmospheres. With a 1D radiative-convective model, we calculate temperature-pressure profiles for a 1 bar carbon dioxide atmosphere containing various amounts of ozone. These ozone profiles are fixed, parameterized profiles. We vary the location of the ozone layer maximum and the concentration at this maximum. The maximum is placed at different pressure levels in the upper and middle atmosphere (1-10 mbar). Results suggest that the impact of ozone on surface temperatures is relatively small. However, the planetary albedo significantly decreases at large ozone concentrations. Throughout the middle and upper atmospheres, temperatures increase upon introducing ozone due to strong UV absorption. This heating of the middle atmosphere strongly reduces the zone of carbon dioxide condensation, hence the potential formation of carbon dioxide clouds. For high ozone concentrations, the formation of carbon dioxide clouds is inhibited in the entire atmosphere. In addition, due to the heating of the middle atmosphere, the cold trap is located at increasingly higher pressures when increasing ozone. This leads to wetter stratospheres hence might increase water loss rates on early Mars. However, increased stratospheric H2O would lead to more HOx, which could efficiently destroy ozone by catalytic cycles, essentially self-limiting the increase of ozone. This result emphasizes the need for consistent climate-chemistry calculations to assess the feedback between temperature structure, water content and ozone chemistry. Furthermore, convection is inhibited at high ozone amounts, leading to a stably stratified atmosphere. (C) 2015 Published by Elsevier Inc.

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