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An Unprecedented Set of High‐Resolution Earth System Simulations for Understanding Multiscale Interactions in Climate Variability and Change

Authors :
Ping Chang
Shaoqing Zhang
Gokhan Danabasoglu
Stephen G. Yeager
Haohuan Fu
Hong Wang
Frederic S. Castruccio
Yuhu Chen
James Edwards
Dan Fu
Yinglai Jia
Lucas C. Laurindo
Xue Liu
Nan Rosenbloom
R. Justin Small
Gaopeng Xu
Yunhui Zeng
Qiuying Zhang
Julio Bacmeister
David A. Bailey
Xiaohui Duan
Alice K. DuVivier
Dapeng Li
Yuxuan Li
Richard Neale
Achim Stössel
Li Wang
Yuan Zhuang
Allison Baker
Susan Bates
John Dennis
Xiliang Diao
Bolan Gan
Abishek Gopal
Dongning Jia
Zhao Jing
Xiaohui Ma
R. Saravanan
Warren G. Strand
Jian Tao
Haiyuan Yang
Xiaoqi Wang
Zhiqiang Wei
Lixin Wu
Source :
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, Vol 12, Iss 12, Pp n/a-n/a (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2020.

Abstract

Abstract We present an unprecedented set of high‐resolution climate simulations, consisting of a 500‐year pre‐industrial control simulation and a 250‐year historical and future climate simulation from 1850 to 2100. A high‐resolution configuration of the Community Earth System Model version 1.3 (CESM1.3) is used for the simulations with a nominal horizontal resolution of 0.25° for the atmosphere and land models and 0.1° for the ocean and sea‐ice models. At these resolutions, the model permits tropical cyclones and ocean mesoscale eddies, allowing interactions between these synoptic and mesoscale phenomena with large‐scale circulations. An overview of the results from these simulations is provided with a focus on model drift, mean climate, internal modes of variability, representation of the historical and future climates, and extreme events. Comparisons are made to solutions from an identical set of simulations using the standard resolution (nominal 1°) CESM1.3 and to available observations for the historical period to address some key scientific questions concerning the impact and benefit of increasing model horizontal resolution in climate simulations. An emerging prominent feature of the high‐resolution pre‐industrial simulation is the intermittent occurrence of polynyas in the Weddell Sea and its interaction with an Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation. Overall, high‐resolution simulations show significant improvements in representing global mean temperature changes, seasonal cycle of sea‐surface temperature and mixed layer depth, extreme events and in relationships between extreme events and climate modes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19422466
Volume :
12
Issue :
12
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8f15892ed670486fbb01a1b224ed9fc4
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2020MS002298