Rl. Dezafra et al., CHLORINE MONOXIDE IN THE ANTARCTIC SPRING VORTEX .1. EVOLUTION OF MIDDAY VERTICAL PROFILES OVER MCMURDO STATION, 1993, JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 100(D7), 1995, pp. 13999-14007
We have obtained a prolonged record of emission spectra from chlorine
monoxide in the vicinity of McMurdo Station, Antarctica, during format
ion of the austral spring ozone hole of 1993. These spectra have been
processed to obtain vertical mixing ratio profiles by deconvolution of
pressure-broadened line shapes. The resulting profiles give a detaile
d evolution for both altitude distribution and mixing ratio of ClO dur
ing development of a major ozone hole event. In early September, very
strong emission was observed from pressure-broadened low-altitude ClO.
Deconvolutions show that this came from an unusually thick layer, ext
ending well above 20 km in altitude. This layer decreased steadily in
thickness through September, accompanied by a shift of the peak mixing
ratio from similar to 21 km altitude in early September to similar to
17-18 km by the end of the month, indicating an apparent descent rate
of order 100 meters per day, although we argue that the true descent
rate is probably lower than the apparent rate. A brief, significant de
crease in ClO content occured in late September when the inner vortex
edge (defined by the magnitude of Ertel's potential vorticity = 5.2 .
10(-5) at similar to 19-20 km) approached McMurdo, signifying that a s
trong gradient in ClO exists near the inner vortex edge. A rapid and a
pparently final deactivation of chlorine in the lower stratosphere was
observed to start about October 1-2. The findings of initially large
values of ClO well above 20 km are consistent with observation of pola
r stratospheric cloud formation in this range during the austral winte
r of 1993, and with observations showing increased ozone depletion abo
ve 20 km relative to previous years.