Publication Abstracts
Hansen et al. 1983
, , , P. Stone, , , , and , 1983: Efficient three-dimensional global models for climate studies: Models I and II. Mon. Weather Rev., 111, 609-662, doi:10.1175/1520-0493(1983)111<0609:ETDGMF>2.0.CO;2.
A global atmospheric model is developed with a computational efficiency which allows long-range climate experiments. The model solves the simultaneous equations for conservation of mass, energy and momentum, and the equation of state on a grid. Differencing schemes for the dynamics are based on work of Arakawa; the schemes do not need any viscosity for numerical stability, and can thus yield good results with coarse resolution. Radiation is computed with a semi-implicit spectral integration, including all significant atmospheric gases, aerosols and cloud particles. Cloud cover and vertical distribution are computed. Convection mixes moisture, heat and momentum, with buoyant air allowed to penetrate to a height determined by its buoyancy. Ground temperature calculations include diurnal variation and seasonal heat storage. Ground hydrology incorporates a water-holding capacity appropriate for the root zone of local vegetation. Snow depth is computed. Snow albedo includes effect of snow age and masking by vegetation. Surface fluxes are obtained from a drag-law formulation and parameterization of the Monin-Obukhov relations.
The initial Model I is used for 60 climate sensitivity experiments with integration times from 3 months to 5 years. These experiments determine the dependence of model simulation on various physical assumptions and model parameters. Several modifications are incorporated to produce Model II, the greatest changes arising from more realistic parameterization of the effect of boundary layer stratification on surface fluxes and the addition of friction in the top stratospheric layer to minimize effects of wave reflection from the rigid model top. The model's climate simulations are compared to observations and a brief study is made of effects of horizontal resolution. It is verified that the major features of global climate can be realistically simulated with a resolution as coarse as 1000 km, which requires an order of magnitude less computation time than used in most general circulation models.
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BibTeX Citation
@article{ha05900x, author={Hansen, J. and Russell, G. and Rind, D. and Stone, P. and Lacis, A. and Lebedeff, S. and Ruedy, R. and Travis, L.}, title={Efficient three-dimensional global models for climate studies: Models I and II}, year={1983}, journal={Monthly Weather Review}, volume={111}, pages={609--662}, doi={10.1175/1520-0493(1983)111%3C0609%3AETDGMF%3E2.0.CO;2}, }
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RIS Citation
TY - JOUR ID - ha05900x AU - Hansen, J. AU - Russell, G. AU - Rind, D. AU - Stone, P. AU - Lacis, A. AU - Lebedeff, S. AU - Ruedy, R. AU - Travis, L. PY - 1983 TI - Efficient three-dimensional global models for climate studies: Models I and II JA - Mon. Weather Rev. JO - Monthly Weather Review VL - 111 SP - 609 EP - 662 DO - 10.1175/1520-0493(1983)111%3C0609%3AETDGMF%3E2.0.CO;2 ER -
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