Improved Simulation of Clear-Sky Shortwave Radiative Transfer in the CCC-GCM
Open Access
- 1 September 1995
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of Climate
- Vol. 8 (9) , 2213-2223
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0442(1995)008<2213:isocss>2.0.co;2
Abstract
The disposition of mean July clear-sky solar radiation in the Canadian Climate Centre second-generation general circulation model (CCC-GCMII) was analyzed by comparing top of the atmosphere (TOA) net fluxes with earth radiation budget experiment (ERBE) data and atmospheric and surface net fluxes with values inferred from Li's algorithm using ERBE data and European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts precipitable water data. GCMII tended to reflect ˜5 W m−2 too much to space. Corresponding atmospheric and surface absorption, however, tended to be too low and high, respectively, by ˜30 W m−2 over much of the Northern Hemisphere. These results were echoed when GCMII atmospheric absorption was compared to estimated results from Li's algorithm driven by GCMII TOA albedo and precipitable water. The latest version of the CCC-GCM (GCMIII) has numerous upgrades to its clear-sky solar radiative transfer algorithm, the most important of which involve water vapor transmittances and aerosols that tend t... Abstract The disposition of mean July clear-sky solar radiation in the Canadian Climate Centre second-generation general circulation model (CCC-GCMII) was analyzed by comparing top of the atmosphere (TOA) net fluxes with earth radiation budget experiment (ERBE) data and atmospheric and surface net fluxes with values inferred from Li's algorithm using ERBE data and European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts precipitable water data. GCMII tended to reflect ˜5 W m−2 too much to space. Corresponding atmospheric and surface absorption, however, tended to be too low and high, respectively, by ˜30 W m−2 over much of the Northern Hemisphere. These results were echoed when GCMII atmospheric absorption was compared to estimated results from Li's algorithm driven by GCMII TOA albedo and precipitable water. The latest version of the CCC-GCM (GCMIII) has numerous upgrades to its clear-sky solar radiative transfer algorithm, the most important of which involve water vapor transmittances and aerosols that tend t...Keywords
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