Arctic cloud annual cycle biases in climate models

<p>Arctic clouds exhibit a robust annual cycle with maximum cloudiness in fall and minimum cloudiness in winter. These variations affect energy flows in the Arctic with a large influence on the surface radiative fluxes. Contemporary climate models struggle to reproduce the observed Arctic clou...

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Main Authors: P. C. Taylor, R. C. Boeke, Y. Li, D. W. J. Thompson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2019-07-01
Series:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Online Access:https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/8759/2019/acp-19-8759-2019.pdf
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spelling doaj-c2139429ed0a4b9eb7bcd965b09e35052020-11-25T01:17:13ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242019-07-01198759878210.5194/acp-19-8759-2019Arctic cloud annual cycle biases in climate modelsP. C. Taylor0R. C. Boeke1Y. Li2D. W. J. Thompson3NASA Langley Research Center, Climate Science Branch, Hampton, Virginia, USAScience Systems Applications Inc., Hampton, Virginia, USADepartment of Atmospheric Science, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USADepartment of Atmospheric Science, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA<p>Arctic clouds exhibit a robust annual cycle with maximum cloudiness in fall and minimum cloudiness in winter. These variations affect energy flows in the Arctic with a large influence on the surface radiative fluxes. Contemporary climate models struggle to reproduce the observed Arctic cloud amount annual cycle and significantly disagree with each other. The goal of this analysis is to quantify the cloud-influencing factors that contribute to winter–summer cloud amount differences, as these seasons are primarily responsible for the model discrepancies with observations. We find that differences in the total cloud amount annual cycle are primarily caused by differences in low, rather than high, clouds; the largest differences occur between the surface and 950&thinsp;hPa. Grouping models based on their seasonal cycles of cloud amount and stratifying cloud amount by cloud-influencing factors, we find that model groups disagree most under strong lower tropospheric stability, weak to moderate mid-tropospheric subsidence, and cold lower tropospheric air temperatures. Intergroup differences in low cloud amount are found to be a function of lower tropospheric thermodynamic characteristics. Further, we find that models with a larger low cloud amount in winter have a larger ice condensate fraction, whereas models with a larger low cloud amount in summer have a smaller ice condensate fraction. Stratifying model output by the specifics of the cloud microphysical scheme reveals that models treating cloud ice and liquid condensate as separate prognostic variables simulate a larger ice condensate fraction than those that treat total cloud condensate as a prognostic variable and use a temperature-dependent phase partitioning. Thus, the cloud microphysical parameterization is the primary cause of inter-model differences in the Arctic cloud annual cycle, providing further evidence of the important role that cloud ice microphysical processes play in the evolution and modeling of the Arctic climate system.</p>https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/8759/2019/acp-19-8759-2019.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author P. C. Taylor
R. C. Boeke
Y. Li
D. W. J. Thompson
spellingShingle P. C. Taylor
R. C. Boeke
Y. Li
D. W. J. Thompson
Arctic cloud annual cycle biases in climate models
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
author_facet P. C. Taylor
R. C. Boeke
Y. Li
D. W. J. Thompson
author_sort P. C. Taylor
title Arctic cloud annual cycle biases in climate models
title_short Arctic cloud annual cycle biases in climate models
title_full Arctic cloud annual cycle biases in climate models
title_fullStr Arctic cloud annual cycle biases in climate models
title_full_unstemmed Arctic cloud annual cycle biases in climate models
title_sort arctic cloud annual cycle biases in climate models
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
issn 1680-7316
1680-7324
publishDate 2019-07-01
description <p>Arctic clouds exhibit a robust annual cycle with maximum cloudiness in fall and minimum cloudiness in winter. These variations affect energy flows in the Arctic with a large influence on the surface radiative fluxes. Contemporary climate models struggle to reproduce the observed Arctic cloud amount annual cycle and significantly disagree with each other. The goal of this analysis is to quantify the cloud-influencing factors that contribute to winter–summer cloud amount differences, as these seasons are primarily responsible for the model discrepancies with observations. We find that differences in the total cloud amount annual cycle are primarily caused by differences in low, rather than high, clouds; the largest differences occur between the surface and 950&thinsp;hPa. Grouping models based on their seasonal cycles of cloud amount and stratifying cloud amount by cloud-influencing factors, we find that model groups disagree most under strong lower tropospheric stability, weak to moderate mid-tropospheric subsidence, and cold lower tropospheric air temperatures. Intergroup differences in low cloud amount are found to be a function of lower tropospheric thermodynamic characteristics. Further, we find that models with a larger low cloud amount in winter have a larger ice condensate fraction, whereas models with a larger low cloud amount in summer have a smaller ice condensate fraction. Stratifying model output by the specifics of the cloud microphysical scheme reveals that models treating cloud ice and liquid condensate as separate prognostic variables simulate a larger ice condensate fraction than those that treat total cloud condensate as a prognostic variable and use a temperature-dependent phase partitioning. Thus, the cloud microphysical parameterization is the primary cause of inter-model differences in the Arctic cloud annual cycle, providing further evidence of the important role that cloud ice microphysical processes play in the evolution and modeling of the Arctic climate system.</p>
url https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/8759/2019/acp-19-8759-2019.pdf
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