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Thermal characteristics of the cold-point tropopause region in CMIP5 models

Cited 41 time in Web of Science Cited 39 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Joowan; Grise, Kevin M.; Son, Seok-Woo

Issue Date
2013-08
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
Citation
Journal of geophysical research - Atmospheres, Vol.118 No.16, pp.8827-8841
Abstract
The climatology, seasonality, and intraseasonal to interannual variability of the temperature field near the cold-point tropopause (CPT) are examined using the state-of-the-art climate models that participated in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5). Both historical simulations and future projections based on the Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 8.5 scenario are used to evaluate model performance and to identify potential changes at the CPT focusing on the 100hPa and zero-lapse-rate (ZLR) temperatures. It is found that historical simulations successfully reproduce the large-scale spatial structure and seasonality of observed temperature and reasonably capture variability associated with El Nino-Southern Oscillation and equatorial waves near the CPT. However, the models show nonnegligible biases in several aspects: (1) most models have a warm bias around the CPT, (2) large intermodel differences occur in the amplitude of the seasonal cycle in 100hPa temperature, (3) several models overestimate lower stratospheric warming in response to volcanic aerosols, (4) temperature variability associated with the quasi-biennial oscillation and Madden-Julian oscillation is absent in most models, and (5) equatorial waves near the CPT exhibit a wide range of variations among the models. In the RCP 8.5 scenario, the models predict robust warming both at the 100hPa and ZLR levels, but cooling at the 70hPa level. A weakened seasonal cycle in the temperature is also predicted in most models at both the 100 and 70hPa levels. These findings may have important implications for cross-tropopause water vapor transport and related global climate change and variability.
ISSN
2169-897X
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/207597
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/jgrd.50649
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  • College of Natural Sciences
  • Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences
Research Area Climate Change, Polar Environmental, Severe Weather, 극지환경, 기후과학, 위험기상

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