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Stratospheric climate and variability of the CMIP5 models

Stratospheric climate and variability of the CMIP5 models.

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Stratospheric climate and variability of the CMIP5 models

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  1. Stratospheric climate and variability of the CMIP5 models Andrew Charlton-Perez, Mark Baldwin, Thomas Birner, Robert Black, Amy Butler, Natalia Calvo, Nicholas Davis, Edwin Gerber, Nathan Gillett, Steven Hardiman, Junsu Kim, Kirstin Krüger, Yun-Young Lee, Elisa Manzini, Brent McDaniel, Lorenzo Polvani, Thomas Reichler, Tiffany Shaw, Michael Sigmond, Seok-Woo Son, Matthew Toohey, Laura Wilcox, Shigeo Yoden, Bo Christiansen, François Lott, Drew Shindell, Seiji Yukimoto, Shingo Watanabe

  2. Comparing high-top and low-top CMIP5 models • Where are there broad differences between high-top and low-top models in CMIP5? • Look at model performance vs. re-analysis for basic dynamical diagnostics • Focus on historical runs of the models • Validation against re-analysis (ERA-Interim and MERRA) • Red = High-top; Blue = Low-top

  3. Models used

  4. Metrics Taylor plot Thick – CMIP5 high-top Thin – CMIP5 low-top Thick dash – CCMVal-2 Thin dash – CMIP3 90S-90N, 100-10hPa Ovals – 2 s.d. sampling intervals for model ensemble

  5. Temperature biases

  6. Jet Biases 1975-2005 vs. ERA-Interim Grey shading - 95% confidence interval Circles – MERRA climatology

  7. SSW Frequency/Variance Variance of 60N and 50hPa DJF zonal mean zonal wind

  8. Stratosphere-Troposphere coupling Baldwin – ‘dripping paint’ NAM index plots for events when index drops below -3 standard deviations at 10hPa

  9. Volcanic response 50hPa geopotential height anomaly for two winters following El Chichon and Pinatubo eruptions (only one OND for El Chichon)

  10. Temperature Trends Lower stratospheric temperature anomalies compared with RSS SSU dataset Models are processed to have the same weighting function as satellite channel Shading shows approx. 5-95% sampling interval for ensemble Volcano years excluded from bottom plot

  11. Main conclusions For models in the CMIP5 ensemble: • Mean climate biases in the lower stratosphere is similar for low-top and high-top ensemble, • Stratospheric variability is too weak in the low-top ensemble, • This has a potential impact on stratosphere-troposphere coupling which is also weaker in the low-top models, • The simulation of stratospheric temperature trends is similar in the low-top and high-top ensemble.

  12. What next? Some things to think about in the context of DynVar: • Can we make progress on persistent biases in both model ensembles (e.g. cold biases in lowermost stratosphere)? • Characterising differences in CMIP5 important, but how much does this reflect general low-top/high-top differences? • Link between variability and coupling worth exploring in more detail.

  13. Implications for CMIP6/other experiments • Likely that many/most models in CMIP6 will include a fully resolved stratosphere – low-top/high-top comparison outdated? • How do we efficiently characterise stratospheric climate/variability in models. • Which elements of the stratospheric climate is it necessary to simulate to capture stratosphere-troposphere coupling?

  14. Extra Slides

  15. Trends continued 1979-2011 Top – obs. Middle – High-top (hatching where observed trends outside range of models) Bottom – Low-top (hatching where low-top and high-top different)

  16. Tropopause

  17. Seasonal cycle/Final Warming

  18. Tropical Upwelling

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