Masahide Kimoto - DAMTP Atmosphere
Transcription
Masahide Kimoto - DAMTP Atmosphere
Studies of natural and anthropogenic climate variability using GCMs Masahide Kimoto Center for Climate System Research (CCSR) University of Tokyo Topics • Natural climate variability – Neutral mode theories of NAO/AO, TAM, and Pacific-Indo Dipole – Ocean-atmosphere interaction in the North Atlantic • Anthropogenic climate variability – The K-1 Japan coupled GCM – Climate change over the East Asia – 20th century climate reproduction (prep.) Zonal-eddy coupling and a neutral mode theory for the Arctic Oscillation Masahide Kimoto, Fei-fei Jin, Masahiro Watanabe, and Natsuko Yasutomi 1 (Geophys. Res. Lett., 28, 737-740, 2001) Neutral Modes dx = Ax + f ≈ 0 dt A = U ? VT Observation AO 500hPa Height u Tf x = ∑ vi σi i 2L Linear Balance Model 1st Singular Mode 400hPa ? Ubar & EP-flux 300hPa Height & E-vector Obs. Neutral mode (T10L20) Kimoto et al. (2001; GRL) A ‘ tilted-trough’ mechanism for the zonal-eddy interaction ua ψ∗ c,ψ∗ a _ _ + ψ∗c+ψ∗ a _ −(u∗v∗)a −∂y(u∗v∗)a Tropical Axisymmetric Mode (TAM) of Variability Masahiro Watanabe, Fei-Fei Jin, and Masahide Kimoto (JC, 2002) CCSR/NIES AGCM NCEP Leading Singular Mode Global warming projection Precipitation (mm/month) Seasonal rainfall climatology B ombay Kagoshim a Londo n Tokyo Mont h T21 June Climate Change An old coupled model result T106 June Climate Change A time slice experiment Surface Temperature simulated by a low-resolution CGCM CCSR CGCMs 1995-2001 : • CCSR/NIES 1 for CMIP 1 & 2 …… T21L20 + 2.8 ox2.8oL17 Flux Corrected • CCSR/NIES 2 for IPCC TAR …… T21L20 + 2.8 ox2.8oL17 Flux Corrected • Kookai TOGA CGCM …… T21 L20 + 0.5-2.0 ox2.5 oL20 No Flux Correction* * except high latitudes • MIROC 2.1 prototype of the ES model …… T42 L20 + 0.5-0.9 ox1.4 oL43 No Flux Correction 2002- : ‘ K-1 project’ for high-resolution climate change projection • MIROC3.1-Hi … T106L56 + 1/6x1/4 L48 Correction No Flux Mid-CGCM* Annual mean SST (Year 71-75) CGCM minus Levitus CGCM Levitus TEST: New mid-CGCM (w/o FA) Old (with FA) SRES-A2 (with FA) 20 Century climate th reproduction with the Mid-CGCM IPCC (2001) External Forcings Natural forcings Solar variability (Lean et al., 1995) Volcanic aerosols in the stratosphere (Sato et al., 1993) Terpene and continuous volcanic eruptions Anthropogenic forcings Well-mixed greenhouse gases Stratospheric ozone change Sulfate aerosols due to fossil fuel use Carbonaceous aerosols due to fossil fuel combustion, agricultural waste burning, fuelwood consumption, and forest fires Sea salt and soil dust aerosols are calculated interactively and are not considered as forcing Radiative forcing (W m 2) due to tropospheric ozone increase calculated by CHASER ( preindustrial presentday ) Tropospheric ozone increase LW + SW ? total ozone forcing 197 TgO3 (preindustrial) ? +10.4 DU (+58%) 311 TgO3 (present-day) Tropospheric ozone radiative forcing W m2 (at tropopause, in annual mean) Global NH SH LW 0.402 0.485 0.319 SW 0.085 0.107 0.063 LW + SW 0.487 0.592 0.382 DJF Normalized radiative forcing = 0.047 W m2 DU1 JJA Historical Emission of Anthropogenic SO2 Country-base historical inventory (Lefohn et al., 1999) Gridded with population distribution map obtained from SEDAC and HYDE database Historical Emission of Anthropogenic Black Carbon Country-base historical inventory of UN Energy Statistics, IEA Energy Balances, International Historical Statistics for fossil fuel combustion FAOSTAT, FAO Production Yearbook, International Historical Statistics for agricultural waste burning FAOSTAT / a few population data for fuelwood consumption GEIA scaled by historical population numbers for forest fire Gridded by population distribution Global & Annual Mean SAT Change OBSERVATION No INDIRECT With INDIRECT Cloud Top Effective Cloud Radius (Experiments With INDIRECT) JMA K-4 20km AGCM Conceptual figures of circulations. Left: assumed in the CCM. Right: developed in the DCM/KCM. Blue arrows show net circulations of mass and water vapor, while orange arrows show convectively forced circulation. Iwaasa et al. (2002)