The climate response to CO2 of the Hadley Centre coupled AOGCM with and without flux adjustment
- 1 August 1997
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Geophysical Research Letters
- Vol. 24 (15) , 1943-1946
- https://doi.org/10.1029/97gl01930
Abstract
Coupled atmosphere‐ocean general circulation models have a tendency to drift away from a realistic climatology. The modelled climate response to an increase of CO2 concentration may be incorrect if the simulation of the current climate has significant errors, so in many models, including ours, the drift is counteracted by applying prescribed fluxes of heat and fresh water at the ocean‐atmosphere interface in addition to the calculated surface exchanges. Since the additional fluxes do not have a physical basis, the use of this technique of “flux adjustment” itself introduces some uncertainty in the simulated response to increased CO2. We find that the global‐average temperature response of our model to CO2 increasing at 1% per year is about 30% less without flux adjustment than with flux adjustment. The geographical patterns of the response are similar, indicating that flux adjustment is not causing any gross distortion. The reduced size of the response is due to more effective vertical transport of heat into the ocean, and a somewhat smaller climate sensitivity. Although the response in both cases lies within the generally accepted range for the climate sensitivity, systematic uncertainties of this size are clearly undesirable, and the best strategy for future development is to improve the climate model in order to reduce the need for flux adjustment.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Influence of natural variability and the cold start problem on the simulated transient response to increasing CO 2Climate Dynamics, 1997
- On the role of flux adjustments in an idealized coupled climate modelClimate Dynamics, 1997
- The second Hadley Centre coupled ocean-atmosphere GCM: model description, spinup and validationClimate Dynamics, 1997
- On Modification of Global Warming by Sulfate AerosolsJournal of Climate, 1997
- El Niño-like climate change in a model with increased atmospheric CO2 concentrationsNature, 1996
- A non‐flux corrected transient CO2 experiment using the BMRC Coupled Atmosphere/Ocean GCMGeophysical Research Letters, 1995
- Climate response to increasing levels of greenhouse gases and sulphate aerosolsNature, 1995
- Time-dependent greenhouse warming computations with a coupled ocean-atmosphere modelClimate Dynamics, 1992
- Transient Responses of a Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Model to Gradual Changes of Atmospheric CO2. Part II: Seasonal ResponseJournal of Climate, 1992
- Two Stable Equilibria of a Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere ModelJournal of Climate, 1988