High solar cycle spectral variations inconsistent with stratospheric ozone observations
W.T. Ball, J.D. Haigh, E.V. Rozanov, A. Kuchar, T. Sukhodolov, F., Tummon, A.V. Shapiro, W. Schmutz

TL;DR
This study evaluates different solar spectral irradiance datasets to determine their consistency with observed ozone variations, finding that larger UV variations from recent satellite data are incompatible with ozone observations, unlike earlier datasets.
Contribution
The paper compares multiple SSI datasets using a chemistry-climate model to identify which best matches observed ozone responses, challenging recent large UV variability claims.
Findings
SORCE UV dataset is inconsistent with ozone observations.
Earlier satellite datasets align better with observed ozone responses.
Larger UV variations lead to exaggerated climate responses in models.
Abstract
Some of the natural variability in climate is understood to come from changes in the Sun. A key route whereby the Sun may influence surface climate is initiated in the tropical stratosphere by the absorption of solar ultraviolet (UV) radiation by ozone, leading to a modification of the temperature and wind structures and consequently to the surface through changes in wave propagation and circulation. While changes in total, spectrally-integrated, solar irradiance lead to small variations in global mean surface temperature, the `top-down' UV effect preferentially influences on regional scales at mid-to-high latitudes with, in particular, a solar signal noted in the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). The amplitude of the UV variability is fundamental in determining the magnitude of the climate response but understanding of the UV variations has been challenged recently by measurements from…
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