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5. Water vapour trends
Figure 8 shows the model water vapour concentrations and trends.
During the first four years of the integration, the water vapour
in the model had not reached steady state and hence this period
is ignored in the calculation of the trends. The model water vapour
is in good agreement with observations (e.g. Randel et al., 1998)
with mesospheric values exceeding 6ppmv and the tropical minimum
of about 3.5 ppmv in the annual average. The model also simulates
realistically low values over Antarctica (minimum 3.0 ppmv in
the annual average) due to the impact of dehydration in the winter
and spring seasons. The trends (Fig. 8) are generally very small
in the stratosphere with increases of order 1% per decade over
most of the domain. Descent over the Arctic combined with methane
oxidation increases the water vapour by almost 3% per decade at
10 hPa, while a slight reduction occurs over Antarctica due to
the dominance of the cooling. The water vapour trends in this
model simulation are controlled by the slight cooling at the tropopause
(Fig. 11) rather than any effects due to the increase in strength
of the Brewer-Dobson circulation.
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