Cloud albedo feedback and the super greenhouse effect in a global coupled GCM

Springer Science and Business Media LLC - Tập 11 - Trang 399-411 - 1995
Gerald A. Meehl1, Warren M. Washington1
1National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder USA

Tóm tắt

Two competing cloud-radiative feedbacks identified in previous studies i.e., cloud albedo feedback and the super greenhouse effect, are examined in a sensitivity study with a global coupled ocean-atmosphere general circulation model. Cloud albedo feedback is strengthened in a sensitivity experiment by lowering the sea-surface temperature (SST) threshold in the specified cloud albedo feedback scheme. This simple parameterization requires coincident warm SSTs and deep convection for upper-level cloud albedos to increase. The enhanced cloud albedo feedback in the sensitivity experiment results in decreased maximum values of SST and cooler surface temperatures over most areas of the planet. There is also a cooling of the tropical troposphere with attendant global changes of atmospheric circulation reminiscent of those observed during La Niña or cold events in the Southern Oscillation. The strengthening of the cloud albedo feedback only occurs over warm tropical oceans (e.g., the western Pacific warm pool), where there is increased albedo, decreased absorbed solar radiation at the surface, stronger surface westerlies, enhanced westward currents, lower temperatures, and decreased precipitation and evaporation. However, the weakened convection over the tropical western Pacific Ocean alters the large-scale circulation in the tropics such that there is increased upper-level divergence over tropical land areas and the tropical Indian Ocean. This results in increased precipitation in those regions and intensified monsoonal regimes. The enhanced precipitation over tropical land areas produces increased clouds and albedo and wetter and cooler land surfaces. These additional contributions to decreased absorbed solar input at the surface combine with similar changes over the tropical oceans to produce the global cooling associated with the stronger cloud albedo feedback. Increased low-level moisture convergence and precipitation over the tropical Indian Ocean enhance slightly the super greenhouse effect there. But the stronger cloud albedo feedback is still the dominant effect, although cooling of SSTs in that region is less than in the tropical western Pacific Ocean. The sensitivity experiment demonstrates how a regional change of radiative forcing is quickly transmitted globally through a combination of radiative and dynamical processes in the coupled model. This study points to the uncertainties involved with the parameterization of cloud albedo and the major implications of such parameterizations concerning the maximum values of SST, global climate sensitivity, and climate change.

Tài liệu tham khảo

Boer GJ (1993) Climate change and the regulation of the surface moisture and energy budgets. Clim Dyn 8:225–239 Collins WD, Valero FPJ, Pilewskie P (1995) The relation of convective cloud forcing, sea surface temperature, and insolation in the central Pacific. Symposium on the Regulation of Sea Surface Temperatures and Warming of the Tropical Ocean Atmosphere System, American Meteorological Society, Boston, MA, 9–12 Flato GM, Hibler WD III (1990) On a simple sea-ice dynamics model for climate studies. Annals Glaciol 14:72–77 Gutzler DS, Kiladis GN, Meehl GA, Weickmann KM, Wheeler M (1994) The global climate of December 1992–February 1993. Part II. Large-scale variability across the tropical western Pacific during TOGA COARE. J Clim 7:1606–1622 Harrison DE, Gutzler DS (1986) Variability of monthly-averaged surface and 850 mb winds at tropical Pacific islands. Mon Weather Rev 114:285–294 Hurrell JW (1995) Comparison of NCAR Community Climate Model (CCM) climates. Clim Dyn 11:25–50 Inamdar AK, Ramanathan V (1994) Physics of greenhouse effect and convection in warm oceans. J Clim 7:715–731 Krishnamurti TN, Bedi HS, Subramanian M (1989) The summer monsoon of 1987. J Clim 4:321–340 Krishnamurti TN, Bedi HS, Subramanian M (1990) The summer monsoon of 1988. Meteorol Atmos Phys 42:19–37 Levitus S (1982) Climatological Atlas of the World Ocean. NOAA Prof Pap 14, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Washington, DC Meehl GA (1989) The coupled ocean-atmosphere modeling problem in the tropical Pacific and Asian monsoon regions. J Clim 2:1146–1163 Meehl GA (1994) Influence of the land surface in the Asian summer monsoon: external conditions versus internal feedbacks. J Clim 7:1033–1049 Meehl GA, Washington WM (1990) CO2 climate sensitivity and snow-sea-ice albedo parameterization in an atmospheric GCM coupled to a mixed-layer ocean model. Clim Change 16:283–306 Ramanathan V, Collins W (1991) Thermodynamic regulation of ocean warming by cirrus clouds deduced from the 1987 El Niño. Nature 351:27–32 Semtner AJ (1976) A model for the thermodynamic growth of sea ice in numerical investigations of climate. J Phys Oceanogr 6:379–389 Senior CA, Mitchell JFB (1993) Carbon dioxide and climate: the impact of cloud parameterization. J Clim 6:393–418 Senior CA, Mitchell JFB, LeTreut H, Li Z-X (1991) The impact of resolution on the simulation of cloud and radiation. In: Modelling changes in climate due to enhanced CO2, the role of atmospheric dynamics, cloud and moisture (Climate Res Tech Note 13). Hadley Centre, Meteorological Office, Bracknell, UK Sun D, Lindzen RS (1993) Distribution of tropical tropospheric water vapor. J Atmos Sci 50:1643–1660 Trenberth KE, Large WG, Olson JG (1990) The mean annual cycle in global ocean wind stress. J Phys Oceanogr 20:1742–1760 van Loon H, Madden RA (1981) The Southern Oscillation. Part I: global associations with pressure and temperature in northern winter. Mon Weather Rev 109:1150–1162 Waliser DE, Graham NE, Gautier C (1993) Comparison of the highly reflective cloud and outgoing longwave radiation datasets for use in estimating tropical deep convection. J Clim 6:331–353 Washington WM, Meehl GA (1989) Climate sensitivity due to increased CO2: experiments with a coupled atmosphere and ocean general circulation model. Clim Dyn 4:1–38 Washington WM, Meehl GA (1993) Greenhouse sensitivity experiments with penetrative cumulus convection and tropical cirrus albedo effects. Clim Dyn 8:211–223 Washington WM, Meehl GA, VerPlank L, Bettge T (1994) A world ocean model for greenhouse sensitivity studies: resolution intercomparison and the role of diagnostic forcing. Clim Dyn 9:321–344