17 research outputs found
Coastal Tropical Convection in a Stochastic Modeling Framework
Recent research has suggested that the overall dependence of convection near
coasts on large-scale atmospheric conditions is weaker than over the open ocean
or inland areas. This is due to the fact that in coastal regions convection is
often supported by meso-scale land-sea interactions and the topography of
coastal areas. As these effects are not resolved and not included in standard
cumulus parametrization schemes, coastal convection is among the most poorly
simulated phenomena in global models. To outline a possible parametrization
framework for coastal convection we develop an idealized modeling approach and
test its ability to capture the main characteristics of coastal convection. The
new approach first develops a decision algorithm, or trigger function, for the
existence of coastal convection. The function is then applied in a stochastic
cloud model to increase the occurrence probability of deep convection when
land-sea interactions are diagnosed to be important. The results suggest that
the combination of the trigger function with a stochastic model is able to
capture the occurrence of deep convection in atmospheric conditions often found
for coastal convection. When coastal effects are deemed to be present the
spatial and temporal organization of clouds that has been documented form
observations is well captured by the model. The presented modeling approach has
therefore potential to improve the representation of clouds and convection in
global numerical weather forecasting and climate models.Comment: Manuscript submitted for publication in Journal of Advances in
Modeling Earth System
Stochastic and Statistical Methods in Climate, Atmosphere, and Ocean Science
Introduction
The behavior of the atmosphere, oceans, and climate is intrinsically uncertain. The basic physical principles that govern atmospheric and oceanic flows are well known, for example, the Navier-Stokes equations for fluid flow, thermodynamic properties of moist air, and the effects of density stratification and Coriolis force. Notwithstanding, there are major sources of randomness and uncertainty that prevent perfect prediction and complete understanding of these flows.
The climate system involves a wide spectrum of space and time scales due to processes occurring on the order of microns and milliseconds such as the formation of cloud and rain droplets to global phenomena involving annual and decadal oscillations such as the EL Nio-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) [5]. Moreover, climate records display a spectral variability ranging from 1 cycle per month to 1 cycle per 100, 000 years [23]. The complexity of the climate system stems in large part from the inherent nonlinearities of fluid mechanics and the phase changes of water substances. The atmosphere and oceans are turbulent, nonlinear systems that display chaotic behavior (e.g., [39]). The time evolutions of the same chaotic system starting from two slightly different initial states diverge exponentially fast, so that chaotic systems are marked by limited predictability. Beyond the so-called predictability horizon (on the order of 10 days for the atmosphere), initial state uncertainties (e.g., due to imperfect observations) have grown to the point that straightforward forecasts are no longer useful.
Another major source of uncertainty stems from the fact that numerical models for atmospheric and oceanic flows cannot describe all relevant physical processes at once. These models are in essence discretized partial differential equations (PDEs), and the derivation of suitable PDEs (e.g., the so-called primitive equations) from more general ones that are less convenient for computation (e.g., the full Navier-Stokes equations) involves approximations and simplifications that introduce errors in the equations. Furthermore, as a result of spatial discretization of the PDEs, numerical models have finite resolution so that small-scale processes with length scales below the model grid scale are not resolved. These limitations are unavoidable, leading to model error and uncertainty.
The uncertainties due to chaotic behavior and unresolved processes motivate the use of stochastic and statistical methods for modeling and understanding climate, atmosphere, and oceans. Models can be augmented with random elements in order to represent time-evolving uncertainties, leading to stochastic models. Weather forecasts and climate predictions are increasingly expressed in probabilistic terms, making explicit the margins of uncertainty inherent to any prediction
Improved MJO-simulation in ECHAM6.3 by coupling a stochastic multicloud model to the convection scheme
We implement a Stochastic Multicloud Model (SMCM) in an observation-informed configuration into the convection scheme of the state-of-the-art GCM ECHAM6.3. The SMCM configuration we use here has been tuned to represent observed tropical convection by associating the occurrence and strength of deep convection to mid-tropospheric vertical velocity and relative humidity. We show that compared to the ECHAM6.3 standard model, the SMCM-modified version shows improved capacity to simulate features of tropical intraseasonal variability, including MJO-like disturbances, without significantly distorting the mean model climate. This improvement goes in hand with ameliorated coupling of atmospheric convection to tropospheric moisture and spatiotemporal coherence of tropical convection compared to reanalysis and observations. We attribute these effects to (i) improved coupling of triggering and suppression of deep convective events to the model's large-scale environment and (ii) the observations-informed closure formulation which leads to an overall reduction of deep convective mass fluxes. Sensitivity tests show that while (ii) improves the convection-moisture relationship, it is (i) which improves the spatiotemporal coherence of tropical rainfall and is important for MJO simulation. Further, the simulated spatiotemporal coherence of tropical rainfall is an intrinsic property of the convection schemes themselves and not of their parameters. We stress that this study serves as a proof-of-concept and motivates further efforts towards building a novel convection parameterization with the SMCM as a central element. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved
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Statistical mechanics in climate emulation: Challenges and perspectives
Climate emulators are a powerful instrument for climate modeling, especially in terms of reducing the computational load for simulating spatiotemporal processes associated with climate systems. The most important type of emulators are statistical emulators trained on the output of an ensemble of simulations from various climate models. However, such emulators oftentimes fail to capture the “physics” of a system that can be detrimental for unveiling critical processes that lead to climate tipping points. Historically, statistical mechanics emerged as a tool to resolve the constraints on physics using statistics. We discuss how climate emulators rooted in statistical mechanics and machine learning can give rise to new climate models that are more reliable and require less observational and computational resources. Our goal is to stimulate discussion on how statistical climate emulators can further be improved with the help of statistical mechanics which, in turn, may reignite the interest of statistical community in statistical mechanics of complex systems
The WWRP Polar Prediction Project (PPP)
Mission statement: “Promote cooperative international research enabling development of improved weather and environmental prediction services for the polar regions, on time scales from hours to seasonal”. Increased economic, transportation and research activities in polar regions are leading to more demands for sustained and improved availability of predictive weather and climate information to support decision-making. However, partly as a result of a strong emphasis of previous international efforts on lower and middle latitudes, many gaps in weather, sub-seasonal and seasonal forecasting in polar regions hamper reliable decision making in the Arctic, Antarctic and possibly the middle latitudes as well.
In order to advance polar prediction capabilities, the WWRP Polar Prediction Project (PPP) has been established as one of three THORPEX (THe Observing System Research and Predictability EXperiment) legacy activities. The aim of PPP, a ten year endeavour (2013-2022), is to promote cooperative international research enabling development of improved weather and environmental prediction services for the polar regions, on hourly to seasonal time scales. In order to achieve its goals, PPP will enhance international and interdisciplinary collaboration through the development of strong linkages with related initiatives; strengthen linkages between academia, research institutions and operational forecasting centres; promote interactions and communication between research and stakeholders; and foster education and outreach.
Flagship research activities of PPP include sea ice prediction, polar-lower latitude linkages and the Year of Polar Prediction (YOPP) - an intensive observational, coupled modelling, service-oriented research and educational effort in the period mid-2017 to mid-2019