“…This method was first developed by Manney et al (1995b, a) to quantify ozone loss during the 1992/93 Arctic winter, using a trajectory-based passive ozone estimate, and has been subsequently applied in similar form to other seasons (e.g., Manney et al, 1996aManney et al, , b, 1997Manney et al, , 2003Schoeberl et al, 2002). Where a full chemistry transport model is employed (e.g., Deniel et al, 1998;Goutail et al, 1999;Singleton et al, , 2007; L. Grooß and Müller, 2007;Rösevall et al, 2008;Jackson and Orsolini, 2008;Kuttippurath et al, , 2012Feng et al, 2011;Brakebusch et al, 2013), ozone loss can be estimated by comparing the modeled passive ozone to both the ozone simulated by the same model and to observed ozone, with comparisons between the latter two fields typically used to quantify the overall accuracy of the model calculations (both from the dynamical and chemical perspective). The passive subtraction approach can be taken a stage further by considering a "pseudo passive" ozone tracer , subject to both dynamical and gas-phase chemistry influences, but not the losses due to chlorine activated through heterogeneous processes.…”