Record Details

Climate Sensitivity of the Community Climate System Model, Version 4

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Climate Sensitivity of the Community Climate System Model, Version 4
Names Bitz, C. M. (creator)
Shell, K. M. (creator)
Gent, P. R. (creator)
Bailey, D. A. (creator)
Danabasoglu, G. (creator)
Armour, K. C. (creator)
Holland, M. M. (creator)
Kiehl, J. T. (creator)
Date Issued 2012-05 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the American Meteorological Society and can be found at: http://www.ametsoc.org/pubs/journals/jcli/.
Abstract Equilibrium climate sensitivity of the Community Climate System Model, version 4 (CCSM4) is 3.20 degrees C for 1 degrees horizontal resolution in each component. This is about a half degree Celsius higher than in the previous version (CCSM3). The transient climate sensitivity of CCSM4 at 1 degrees resolution is 1.72 degrees C, which is about 0.2 degrees C higher than in CCSM3. These higher climate sensitivities in CCSM4 cannot be explained by the change to a preindustrial baseline climate. This study uses the radiative kernel technique to show that, from CCSM3 to CCSM4, the global mean lapse-rate feedback declines in magnitude and the shortwave cloud feedback increases. These two warming effects are partially canceled by cooling because of slight decreases in the global mean water vapor feedback and longwave cloud feedback from CCSM3 to CCSM4.

A new formulation of the mixed layer, slab-ocean model in CCSM4 attempts to reproduce the SST and sea ice climatology from an integration with a full-depth ocean, and it is integrated with a dynamic sea ice model. These new features allow an isolation of the influence of ocean dynamical changes on the climate response when comparing integrations with the slab ocean and full-depth ocean. The transient climate response of the full-depth ocean version is 0.54 of the equilibrium climate sensitivity when estimated with the new slab-ocean model version for both CCSM3 and CCSM4. The authors argue the ratio is the same in both versions because they have about the same zonal mean pattern of change in ocean surface heat flux, which broadly resembles the zonal mean pattern of net feedback strength.
Genre Article
Topic Sea ice
Identifier Bitz, C., Shell, K., Gent, P., Bailey, D., Danabasoglu, G., Armour, K., . . . . (2012). Climate sensitivity of the community climate system model, version 4. Journal of Climate, 25(9), 3053-3070. doi: 10.1175/JCLI-D-11-00290.1

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