the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Prescribing the aerosol effective radiative forcing in the Simple Cloud-Resolving E3SM Atmosphere Model v1
Hassan Beydoun
Johannes Mülmenstädt
Noel Keen
Adam C. Varble
Luca Bertagna
Peter Bogenschutz
Andrew Bradley
Matthew W. Christensen
T. Conrad Clevenger
Aaron Donahue
Jerome Fast
James Foucar
Jean-Christophe Golaz
Oksana Guba
Walter Hannah
Benjamin Hillman
Robert Jacob
Wuyin Lin
Po-Lun Ma
Yun Qian
Balwinder Singh
Christopher Terai
Hailong Wang
Mingxuan Wu
Kai Zhang
Andrew Gettelman
Mark Taylor
L. Ruby Leung
Peter Caldwell
Susannah Burrows
Related authors
Whether increased aerosol increases or decreases liquid cloud mass has been a longstanding question. Observed correlations suggest that aerosols thin liquid cloud, but we are able to show that observations were consistent with an increase in liquid cloud in response to aerosols by leveraging a model where causality could be traced.
Large volcanic eruptions deposit material in the upper atmosphere, which is capable of altering temperature and wind patterns of Earth's atmosphere for subsequent years. This research describes a new method of simulating these effects in an idealized, efficient atmospheric model. A volcanic eruption of sulfur dioxide is described with a simplified set of physical rules, which eventually cools the planetary surface. This model has been designed as a test bed for climate attribution studies.
Climate models are crucial for predicting climate change in detail. This paper proposes a balanced approach to improving their accuracy by combining traditional process-based methods with modern artificial intelligence (AI) techniques while maximizing the resolution to allow for ensemble simulations. The authors propose using AI to learn from both observational and simulated data while incorporating existing physical knowledge to reduce data demands and improve climate prediction reliability.
Exascale Earth System Model (E3SMv2) to document model performance and understand what updates in E3SMv2 have caused changes in clouds from E3SMv1 to E3SMv2. We find that stratocumulus clouds along the subtropical west coast of continents are dramatically improved, primarily due to the retuning done in CLUBB. This study offers additional insights into clouds simulated in E3SMv2 and will benefit future E3SM developments.
hiddensource of inter-model variability and may be leading to bias in some climate model results.
too much light rain and too little heavy rainis largely alleviated over the tropics with the stochastic scheme. Results from this study provide important insights into the model performance of EAMv1 when stochasticity is included in the deep convective parameterization.