Robust elements of Snowball Earth atmospheric circulation and oases for life

Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres American Geophysical Union (AGU) 118:12 (2013) 6017-6027

Authors:

Dorian S Abbot, Aiko Voigt, Dawei Li, Guillaume Le Hir, Raymond T Pierrehumbert, Mark Branson, David Pollard, Daniel DB Koll

Atmospheric composition, irreversible climate change, and mitigation policy.

Chapter in Climate Science for Serving Society Research, Modeling and Prediction Priorities, Springer Science & Business Media (2013) 15

Authors:

S Solomon, RT Pierrehumbert, HD matthews, JS Daniel, P Friedlingstein

Abstract:

This volume offers a comprehensive survey and a close analysis of efforts to develop actionable climate information in support of vital decisions for climate adaptation, risk management and policy.

Revisiting the controversial issue of tropical tropospheric temperature trends

Geophysical Research Letters 40:11 (2013) 2801-2806

Authors:

DM Mitchell, PW Thorne, PA Stott, LJ Gray

Abstract:

Controversy remains over a discrepancy between modeled and observed tropical upper tropospheric temperature trends. This discrepancy is reassessed using simulations from the Coupled Climate Model Inter-comparison Project phase 5 (CMIP 5) together with radiosonde and surface observations that provide multiple realizations of possible "observed" temperatures given various methods of homogenizing the data. Over the 1979-2008 period, tropical temperature trends are not consistent with observations throughout the depth of the troposphere, and this primarily stems from a poor simulation of the surface temperature trends. This discrepancy is substantially reduced when (1) atmosphere-only simulations are examined or (2) the trends are considered as an amplification of the surface temperature trend with height. Using these approaches, it is shown that within observational uncertainty, the 5-95 percentile range of temperature trends from both coupled-ocean and atmosphere-only models are consistent with the analyzed observations at all but the upper most tropospheric level (150 hPa), and models with ultra-high horizontal resolution (≤ 0.5° × 0.5°) perform particularly well. Other than model resolution, it is hypothesized that this remaining discrepancy could be due to a poor representation of stratospheric ozone or remaining observational uncertainty. © 2013 American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.

Multi-model analysis of Northern Hemisphere winter blocking: Model biases and the role of resolution

Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres 118:10 (2013) 3956-3971

Authors:

JA Anstey, P Davini, LJ Gray, TJ Woollings, N Butchart, C Cagnazzo, B Christiansen, SC Hardiman, SM Osprey, S Yang

Abstract:

Blocking of the tropospheric jet stream during Northern Hemisphere winter (December-January-February) is examined in a multi-model ensemble of coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models (GCMs) obtained from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5). The CMIP5 models exhibit large biases in blocking frequency and related biases in tropospheric jet latitude, similar to earlier generations of GCMs. Underestimated blocking at high latitudes, especially over Europe, is common. In general, model biases decrease as model resolution increases. Increased blocking frequency at high latitudes in both the Atlantic and Pacific basins, as well as more realistic variability of Atlantic jet latitude, are associated with increased vertical resolution in the mid-troposphere to lowermost stratosphere. Finer horizontal resolution is associated with higher blocking frequency at all latitudes in the Atlantic basin but appears to have no systematic impact on blocking near Greenland or in the Pacific basin. Results from the CMIP5 analysis are corroborated by additional controlled experiments using selected GCMs. Key PointsCMIP5 models have large blocking biases and associated jet biasesIncreased spatial resolution is associated with reduced blocking and jet biasesVertical and horizontal resolution give blocking changes in different regions ©2013. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.

Multi-model analysis of Northern Hemisphere winter blocking: Model biases and the role of resolution

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES 118:10 (2013) 3956-3971

Authors:

James A Anstey, Paolo Davini, Lesley J Gray, Tim J Woollings, Neal Butchart, Chiara Cagnazzo, Bo Christiansen, Steven C Hardiman, Scott M Osprey, Shuting Yang