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Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially supported by the Willis Research Network and the Research Program to Greg Holland Note: This discussion applies only to regional climate simulations and interpretations

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Page 1: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Comparison of Different Approaches

NCAR Earth System LaboratoryNational Center for Atmospheric Research

NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially supported by the Willis Research Network and the Research Program to Secure Energy for America

Greg Holland

Note: This discussion applies only to regional climate simulations and interpretations

Page 2: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Summary of Different Approaches• Model Dynamics and Physics• Spectral Nudging• Horizontal Boundary Conditions• Surface Boundary (ocean and land)• Length of Forecasts

Potential Impacts of Different Approaches:• Level I: results in scatter, but does not substantially change

the overall outcome or interpretation;• Level II: may substantially impact the overall interpretation

but this cannot be fully quantified;• Level III: probably will substantially impact the overall

interpretation.

Holland Comparison of Approaches RPSEA 0310

Page 3: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Model Dynamics• Dynamical Core

– Discretization of the equations– Grid solvers– Accuracy and long-term drift

• Level I impacts on changes

Holland Comparison of Approaches RPSEA 0310

Page 4: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Cloud Physical Processes• For coarse grids, dx>15-20 km,

require cumulus parameterization• Issues

– Changing the parameterization scheme, or even tuning the inherent parameters can make a substantial difference to the results

– This is sorted empirically by experience and comparison with known climate (we did this in NRCM Phase I)

• Level I impacts on changes.

Holland Comparison of Approaches RPSEA 0310

Page 5: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Cloud Physical Processes ctd• Issues:

– For very fine grids, dx<4-5 km, cloud physical processes directly (called resolvable convection)

– From 4-20 km there is no good approach.– GFDL and others have used explicit clouds

and no parameterization in the 15-20 km zone– NCAR does not generally do simulations for

4<dx<12 km, above 12 km we use cumulus parameterization, occasionally with some explicit clouds also.

• Level II impacts, requires some further investigation to determine actual impacts

Holland Comparison of Approaches RPSEA 0310

Page 6: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Other Physical Processes

• Boundary-layer transfers, radiation budget, etc

• All are different, but all are also carefully compared to “reality”

• Probably Level I impacts.

Holland Comparison of Approaches RPSEA 0310

Page 7: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Spectral Nudging• Nudging the interior domain to force it to

follow the global model, with a spectral cut-off– e.g. GFDL use global wave numbers 0,1 and 2

for spectral nudging

• Issues may result in a false sense of accuracy when a good fit is obtained for current climate using global analyses, but it then can introduce substantial errors when forced to follow the global climate model for predictions

• Level II and Level III impacts.Holland Comparison of

Approaches RPSEA 0310

Page 8: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Example Impact of Spectral Nudging

2005 Aug-Sept-Oct(mm dd)

Observation15 Storms

Spectral Nudging9 Storms

Control12 Storms

Page 9: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Horizontal Boundary Conditions• The global model forces the regional

model across the horizontal boundaries, different approaches include:– Hand all information from the global domain– Use current weather and add climate

increments of , e.g. temperature, humidity, mean wind conditions, etc

– Bias correct the global model for known errors

• Issues: small domains, use of combination of current analysis and climate perturbation

• Level II and Level III impacts.Holland Comparison of

Approaches RPSEA 0310

Page 10: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

WRF12 kmWRF

36 km Imag

e by

Ste

ve D

ayo

@U

CA

R

CCSM ~ 150 km

CC

SM ~

150

km

Nested Regional Climate Model Specifics

Holland Comparison of Approaches RPSEA 0310

Outer domain size chosen to maximize internal generation of relevant weather systems, such as easterly waves. And thus to minimize impacts of known biases in the global climate models.

Page 11: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Surface Boundary Condition

• Fixed Ocean (defined by bias-corrected global model)– Careful testing leads us to the conclusion that

this is not a major problem in the Atlantic….Level I Impact

• However– Eastern Pacific climate model bias definitely

leads to Level III impacts on the Atlantic….

Holland Comparison of Approaches RPSEA 0310

Page 12: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Holland Comparison of Approaches RPSEA 0310

NCEP/NCAR ReanalysisCCSM

Windshear Bias in CCSM

(Vecchi and Soden 2007)

Page 13: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Yamada et al (2010)

Their Conclusion: “Consistent with recent studies, frequency is reduced over the North Atlantic due to intensified vertical wind shear.”

Holland Comparison of Approaches RPSEA 0310

Page 14: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Length of Forecasts

• Computing limitations mean that compromises have to be made on the length of climate predictions at high resolution:– We decided on 3x11-y time slices– GFDL use 3-months Aug-Sep-Oct for each year– Yamada et al (2010) did a single 5-month

global simulation.

• Level I-III impacts:– For NRCM, Level I

Holland Comparison of Approaches RPSEA 0310

Page 15: Comparison of Different Approaches NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this work is partially

Summary

Holland Comparison of Approaches RPSEA 0310

The choice of model configuration and the way in which model biases are handled can have a substantial impact on the prediction. For existing studies the level of impacts are:• Model Dynamics: Level I• Model Physics: Level I-III• Spectral Nudging: Level III• Horizontal Boundary Conditions:

Level I-III• Surface Boundary (ocean and land):

Level III• Length of Forecasts: Level I