The
future climate change projections are essentially based on coupled
general circulation model (CGCM) simulations, which give a distinct
global warming pattern with arctic winter amplification, an equilibrium
land-sea warming contrast and an inter-hemispheric warming gradient.
While these simulations are the most important tool of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predictions, the
conceptual understanding of these predicted structures of climate change
and the causes of their uncertainties is very difficult to reach if
only based on these highly complex CGCM simulations.
In the model presented here
we will introduce a very simple, globally resolved energy balance
(GREB) model, which is capable of simulating the main characteristics of
global warming. The model shall give a bridge between the strongly
simplified energy balance models and the fully coupled 4-dimensional
complex CGCMs. It provides a fast tool for the conceptual understanding
and development of hypotheses for climate change studies, which shall
build a basis or starting point for more detailed studies of
observations and CGCM simulations. It is based on the surface energy
balance by very simple representations of solar and thermal radiation,
the atmospheric hydrological cycle, sensible turbulent heat flux,
transport by the mean atmospheric circulation and heat exchange with the
deeper ocean. It can, on a standard PC-computer, simulate about
100,000yrs per 24hr CPU time. So roughly one simulation year per second.
Despite some limitations in the representations of the basic processes,
the models climate sensitivity and the spatial structure of the warming
pattern are within the uncertainties of the IPCC models simulations. It
is capable of simulating aspects of the arctic winter amplification, the
equilibrium land-sea warming contrast and the inter-hemispheric warming
gradient with good agreement to the IPCC models in amplitude and
structure.
The results give some insight into the understanding of the land-sea
contrast and the polar amplification. The GREB model suggests that the
regional inhomogeneous distribution of atmospheric water vapor and the
non-linear sensitivity of the downward thermal radiation to changes in
the atmospheric water vapor concentration partly cause the land-sea
contrast and may also contribute to the polar amplification. The
combination of these characteristics causes, in general, dry and cold
regions to warm more than other regions."
http://users.monash.edu.au/~dietmard/papers/dommenget.and.floeter.greb.paper.cdym2011.pdf
http://users.monash.edu.au/~dietmard/teaching/GREB.lecture.notes.pdf
https://github.com/alex-robinson/greb-ucm
http://monash.edu/research/simple-climate-model/mscm/index.html
http://users.monash.edu.au/~dietmard/teaching/GREB.lecture.notes.pdf
https://github.com/alex-robinson/greb-ucm
http://monash.edu/research/simple-climate-model/mscm/index.html
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