Earth’s future climate and its variability simulated at 9 km global resolution
Earth’s climate response to increasing greenhouse gas emissions occurs on a variety of spatial scales. To assess climate risks on regional scales and implement adaptation measures, policymakers and stakeholders often require climate change information on scales that are smaller (less than...
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ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:egusphere122443 2024-09-15T18:24:16+00:00 Earth’s future climate and its variability simulated at 9 km global resolution Moon, Ja-Yeon Streffing, Jan Lee, Sun-Seon Semmler, Tido Andrés-Martínez, Miguel Chen, Jiao Cho, Eun-Byeoul Chu, Jung-Eun Franzke, Christian Gärtner, Jan P. Ghosh, Rohit Hegewald, Jan Hong, Songyee Koldunov, Nikolay Lee, June-Yi Lin, Zihao Liu, Chao Loza, Svetlana Park, Wonsun Roh, Woncheol Sein, Dmitry V. Sharma, Sahil Sidorenko, Dmitry Son, Jun-Hyeok Stuecker, Malte F. Wang, Qiang Yi, Gyuseok Zapponini, Martina Jung, Thomas Timmermann, Axel 2024-08-09 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2024-2491 https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2024/egusphere-2024-2491/ eng eng doi:10.5194/egusphere-2024-2491 https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2024/egusphere-2024-2491/ eISSN: Text 2024 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2024-2491 2024-08-12T14:05:16Z Earth’s climate response to increasing greenhouse gas emissions occurs on a variety of spatial scales. To assess climate risks on regional scales and implement adaptation measures, policymakers and stakeholders often require climate change information on scales that are smaller (less than 10 km) than the typical resolution of global climate models [ O (100 km)]. To close this important knowledge gap and consider the impact of small-scale processes on the global scale, we adopted a novel iterative global earth system modeling protocol. This protocol provides key information on Earth’s future climate and its variability on storm-resolving scales (less than 10 km). To this end we used the coupled Earth system model OpenIFS-FESOM2 (AWI-CM3) with a 9 km atmospheric resolution (TCo1279) and a 4–25 km ocean resolution. We conducted a 20-year 1950 control simulation and four 10-year-long coupled transient simulations for the 2000s, 2030s, 2060s, and 2090s. These simulations were initialized from the trajectory of a coarser 31 km (TCo319) SSP5-8.5 transient greenhouse warming simulation of the coupled model with the same high-resolution ocean. Similar to the coarser resolution TCo319 transient simulation, the high resolution TCo1279 simulation with SSP5-8.5 scenario exhibits a strong warming response relative to present-day conditions, reaching up to 6.5 °C by the end of the century at CO 2 levels of about 1,100 ppm. The TCo1279 high resolution simulations show a substantial increase in regional information and granularity relative to the TCo319 experiment (or any other lower resolution model), especially over topographically complex terrain. Examples of enhanced regional information include projected changes in temperature, rainfall, winds, extreme events, tropical cyclones, and in the hydroclimate teleconnection patterns of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation and the North Atlantic Oscillation. The novel iterative modelling protocol, that facilitates storm-resolving global ... Text North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation Copernicus Publications: E-Journals |
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Open Polar |
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Copernicus Publications: E-Journals |
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ftcopernicus |
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English |
description |
Earth’s climate response to increasing greenhouse gas emissions occurs on a variety of spatial scales. To assess climate risks on regional scales and implement adaptation measures, policymakers and stakeholders often require climate change information on scales that are smaller (less than 10 km) than the typical resolution of global climate models [ O (100 km)]. To close this important knowledge gap and consider the impact of small-scale processes on the global scale, we adopted a novel iterative global earth system modeling protocol. This protocol provides key information on Earth’s future climate and its variability on storm-resolving scales (less than 10 km). To this end we used the coupled Earth system model OpenIFS-FESOM2 (AWI-CM3) with a 9 km atmospheric resolution (TCo1279) and a 4–25 km ocean resolution. We conducted a 20-year 1950 control simulation and four 10-year-long coupled transient simulations for the 2000s, 2030s, 2060s, and 2090s. These simulations were initialized from the trajectory of a coarser 31 km (TCo319) SSP5-8.5 transient greenhouse warming simulation of the coupled model with the same high-resolution ocean. Similar to the coarser resolution TCo319 transient simulation, the high resolution TCo1279 simulation with SSP5-8.5 scenario exhibits a strong warming response relative to present-day conditions, reaching up to 6.5 °C by the end of the century at CO 2 levels of about 1,100 ppm. The TCo1279 high resolution simulations show a substantial increase in regional information and granularity relative to the TCo319 experiment (or any other lower resolution model), especially over topographically complex terrain. Examples of enhanced regional information include projected changes in temperature, rainfall, winds, extreme events, tropical cyclones, and in the hydroclimate teleconnection patterns of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation and the North Atlantic Oscillation. The novel iterative modelling protocol, that facilitates storm-resolving global ... |
format |
Text |
author |
Moon, Ja-Yeon Streffing, Jan Lee, Sun-Seon Semmler, Tido Andrés-Martínez, Miguel Chen, Jiao Cho, Eun-Byeoul Chu, Jung-Eun Franzke, Christian Gärtner, Jan P. Ghosh, Rohit Hegewald, Jan Hong, Songyee Koldunov, Nikolay Lee, June-Yi Lin, Zihao Liu, Chao Loza, Svetlana Park, Wonsun Roh, Woncheol Sein, Dmitry V. Sharma, Sahil Sidorenko, Dmitry Son, Jun-Hyeok Stuecker, Malte F. Wang, Qiang Yi, Gyuseok Zapponini, Martina Jung, Thomas Timmermann, Axel |
spellingShingle |
Moon, Ja-Yeon Streffing, Jan Lee, Sun-Seon Semmler, Tido Andrés-Martínez, Miguel Chen, Jiao Cho, Eun-Byeoul Chu, Jung-Eun Franzke, Christian Gärtner, Jan P. Ghosh, Rohit Hegewald, Jan Hong, Songyee Koldunov, Nikolay Lee, June-Yi Lin, Zihao Liu, Chao Loza, Svetlana Park, Wonsun Roh, Woncheol Sein, Dmitry V. Sharma, Sahil Sidorenko, Dmitry Son, Jun-Hyeok Stuecker, Malte F. Wang, Qiang Yi, Gyuseok Zapponini, Martina Jung, Thomas Timmermann, Axel Earth’s future climate and its variability simulated at 9 km global resolution |
author_facet |
Moon, Ja-Yeon Streffing, Jan Lee, Sun-Seon Semmler, Tido Andrés-Martínez, Miguel Chen, Jiao Cho, Eun-Byeoul Chu, Jung-Eun Franzke, Christian Gärtner, Jan P. Ghosh, Rohit Hegewald, Jan Hong, Songyee Koldunov, Nikolay Lee, June-Yi Lin, Zihao Liu, Chao Loza, Svetlana Park, Wonsun Roh, Woncheol Sein, Dmitry V. Sharma, Sahil Sidorenko, Dmitry Son, Jun-Hyeok Stuecker, Malte F. Wang, Qiang Yi, Gyuseok Zapponini, Martina Jung, Thomas Timmermann, Axel |
author_sort |
Moon, Ja-Yeon |
title |
Earth’s future climate and its variability simulated at 9 km global resolution |
title_short |
Earth’s future climate and its variability simulated at 9 km global resolution |
title_full |
Earth’s future climate and its variability simulated at 9 km global resolution |
title_fullStr |
Earth’s future climate and its variability simulated at 9 km global resolution |
title_full_unstemmed |
Earth’s future climate and its variability simulated at 9 km global resolution |
title_sort |
earth’s future climate and its variability simulated at 9 km global resolution |
publishDate |
2024 |
url |
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2024-2491 https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2024/egusphere-2024-2491/ |
genre |
North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation |
genre_facet |
North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation |
op_source |
eISSN: |
op_relation |
doi:10.5194/egusphere-2024-2491 https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2024/egusphere-2024-2491/ |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2024-2491 |
_version_ |
1810464600413437952 |