Title of article :
Origin of climate sensitivity differences: role of selected radiative processes in two GCMs
Author/Authors :
BENJAMIN A. CASH، نويسنده , , EDWIN K. SCHNEIDER ، نويسنده , , LENNART BENGTSSON، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Model differences in projections of global mean and regional climate change due to increasing greenhouse gases are
investigated using two atmospheric general circulation models (AGCMs): ECHAM4 (Max Planck Institute, version 4)
andCCM3(National Center for Atmospheric Research Community Climate Model version 3).We replace theECHAM4
short-wave processes (including routines for short-wave radiation, aerosols, cloud liquid water path and cloud droplet
size distribution) with the corresponding parametrizations from CCM3.We also eliminate sea-ice in both models.We find
that the resulting ‘hybrid’-ECHAM4 model has the same global mean temperature sensitivity (defined as the difference
in temperature between the 2× CO2 and 1× CO2 integrations at equilibrium) and similar regional temperature change
patterns as CCM3. The global mean precipitation sensitivity was only slightly affected; indicating different processes
control this.
Investigation of top of the atmosphere radiative feedbacks in the standard-ECHAM4 and hybrid-ECHAM4 models
show that the differences in global mean temperature sensitivity and regional temperature change patterns can
be attributed primarily to a stronger, negative, cloud short-wave feedback in the tropics of the hybrid-ECHAM4
model. However, comparison of the hybrid-ECHAM4 model to CCM3 reveals large differences in partitioning of
the cloud feedbacks between long-wave and short-wave in the two models. This suggests that the global mean
temperature sensitivity and regional temperature change patterns respond primarily to the magnitude and distribution
of the top of the atmosphere feedbacks and are relatively insensitive to the partitioning between individual
processes
Journal title :
Tellus. Series A
Journal title :
Tellus. Series A