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The impact of parametrized convection on cloud feedback

Authors :
Masahiro Watanabe
Matthew D. Woelfle
Abderrahmane Idelkadi
Adrian Lock
Tomoo Ogura
Sarah M. Kang
Romain Roehrig
Tsuyoshi Koshiro
Ming Zhao
Hideaki Kawai
Christopher S. Bretherton
Steven C. Sherwood
Yechul Shin
Thorsten Mauritsen
Mark J. Webb
Jason N. S. Cole
Sandrine Bony
Jessica Vial
Source :
Philosophical transactions. Series A, Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
The Royal Society Publishing, 2015.

Abstract

We investigate the sensitivity of cloud feedbacks to the use of convective parametrizations by repeating the CMIP5/CFMIP-2 AMIP/AMIP + 4K uniform sea surface temperature perturbation experiments with 10 climate models which have had their convective parametrizations turned off. Previous studies have suggested that differences between parametrized convection schemes are a leading source of inter-model spread in cloud feedbacks. We find however that ‘ConvOff’ models with convection switched off have a similar overall range of cloud feedbacks compared with the standard configurations. Furthermore, applying a simple bias correction method to allow for differences in present-day global cloud radiative effects substantially reduces the differences between the cloud feedbacks with and without parametrized convection in the individual models. We conclude that, while parametrized convection influences the strength of the cloud feedbacks substantially in some models, other processes must also contribute substantially to the overall inter-model spread. The positive shortwave cloud feedbacks seen in the models in subtropical regimes associated with shallow clouds are still present in the ConvOff experiments. Inter-model spread in shortwave cloud feedback increases slightly in regimes associated with trade cumulus in the ConvOff experiments but is quite similar in the most stable subtropical regimes associated with stratocumulus clouds. Inter-model spread in longwave cloud feedbacks in strongly precipitating regions of the tropics is substantially reduced in the ConvOff experiments however, indicating a considerable local contribution from differences in the details of convective parametrizations. In both standard and ConvOff experiments, models with less mid-level cloud and less moist static energy near the top of the boundary layer tend to have more positive tropical cloud feedbacks. The role of non-convective processes in contributing to inter-model spread in cloud feedback is discussed.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712962 and 1364503X
Volume :
373
Issue :
2054
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Philosophical transactions. Series A, Mathematical, physical, and engineering sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9d8f6dcc005e39d3fe786250997f49ad