Methodological aspects of a pattern-scaling approach to produce global fields of monthly means of daily maximum and minimum temperature

A Climate Pattern-Scaling Model (CPSM) that simulates global patterns of climate change, for a prescribed emissions scenario, is described. A CPSM works by quantitatively establishing the statistical relationship between a climate variable at a specific location (e.g. daily maximum surface temperatu...

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Published in:Geoscientific Model Development
Main Authors: Kremser, S., Bodeker, G. E., Lewis, J.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-7-249-2014
https://gmd.copernicus.org/articles/7/249/2014/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:gmd21714 2023-05-15T15:19:50+02:00 Methodological aspects of a pattern-scaling approach to produce global fields of monthly means of daily maximum and minimum temperature Kremser, S. Bodeker, G. E. Lewis, J. 2018-09-27 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-7-249-2014 https://gmd.copernicus.org/articles/7/249/2014/ eng eng doi:10.5194/gmd-7-249-2014 https://gmd.copernicus.org/articles/7/249/2014/ eISSN: 1991-9603 Text 2018 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-7-249-2014 2020-07-20T16:25:11Z A Climate Pattern-Scaling Model (CPSM) that simulates global patterns of climate change, for a prescribed emissions scenario, is described. A CPSM works by quantitatively establishing the statistical relationship between a climate variable at a specific location (e.g. daily maximum surface temperature, T max ) and one or more predictor time series (e.g. global mean surface temperature, T global ) – referred to as the "training" of the CPSM. This training uses a regression model to derive fit coefficients that describe the statistical relationship between the predictor time series and the target climate variable time series. Once that relationship has been determined, and given the predictor time series for any greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions scenario, the change in the climate variable of interest can be reconstructed – referred to as the "application" of the CPSM. The advantage of using a CPSM rather than a typical atmosphere–ocean global climate model (AOGCM) is that the predictor time series required by the CPSM can usually be generated quickly using a simple climate model (SCM) for any prescribed GHG emissions scenario and then applied to generate global fields of the climate variable of interest. The training can be performed either on historical measurements or on output from an AOGCM. Using model output from 21st century simulations has the advantage that the climate change signal is more pronounced than in historical data and therefore a more robust statistical relationship is obtained. The disadvantage of using AOGCM output is that the CPSM training might be compromised by any AOGCM inadequacies. For the purposes of exploring the various methodological aspects of the CPSM approach, AOGCM output was used in this study to train the CPSM. These investigations of the CPSM methodology focus on monthly mean fields of daily temperature extremes ( T max and T min ). The methodological aspects of the CPSM explored in this study include (1) investigation of the advantage gained in having five predictor time series over having only one predictor time series, (2) investigation of the time dependence of the fit coefficients and (3) investigation of the dependence of the fit coefficients on GHG emissions scenario. Key conclusions are (1) overall, the CPSM trained on simulations based on the Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 8.5 emissions scenario is able to reproduce AOGCM simulations of T max and T min based on predictor time series from an RCP 4.5 emissions scenario; (2) access to hemisphere average land and ocean temperatures as predictors improves the variance that can be explained, particularly over the oceans; (3) regression model fit coefficients derived from individual simulations based on the RCP 2.6, 4.5 and 8.5 emissions scenarios agree well over most regions of the globe (the Arctic is the exception); (4) training the CPSM on concatenated time series from an ensemble of simulations does not result in fit coefficients that explain significantly more of the variance than an approach that weights results based on single simulation fits; and (5) the inclusion of a linear time dependence in the regression model fit coefficients improves the variance explained, primarily over the oceans. Text Arctic Climate change Copernicus Publications: E-Journals Arctic Geoscientific Model Development 7 1 249 266
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description A Climate Pattern-Scaling Model (CPSM) that simulates global patterns of climate change, for a prescribed emissions scenario, is described. A CPSM works by quantitatively establishing the statistical relationship between a climate variable at a specific location (e.g. daily maximum surface temperature, T max ) and one or more predictor time series (e.g. global mean surface temperature, T global ) – referred to as the "training" of the CPSM. This training uses a regression model to derive fit coefficients that describe the statistical relationship between the predictor time series and the target climate variable time series. Once that relationship has been determined, and given the predictor time series for any greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions scenario, the change in the climate variable of interest can be reconstructed – referred to as the "application" of the CPSM. The advantage of using a CPSM rather than a typical atmosphere–ocean global climate model (AOGCM) is that the predictor time series required by the CPSM can usually be generated quickly using a simple climate model (SCM) for any prescribed GHG emissions scenario and then applied to generate global fields of the climate variable of interest. The training can be performed either on historical measurements or on output from an AOGCM. Using model output from 21st century simulations has the advantage that the climate change signal is more pronounced than in historical data and therefore a more robust statistical relationship is obtained. The disadvantage of using AOGCM output is that the CPSM training might be compromised by any AOGCM inadequacies. For the purposes of exploring the various methodological aspects of the CPSM approach, AOGCM output was used in this study to train the CPSM. These investigations of the CPSM methodology focus on monthly mean fields of daily temperature extremes ( T max and T min ). The methodological aspects of the CPSM explored in this study include (1) investigation of the advantage gained in having five predictor time series over having only one predictor time series, (2) investigation of the time dependence of the fit coefficients and (3) investigation of the dependence of the fit coefficients on GHG emissions scenario. Key conclusions are (1) overall, the CPSM trained on simulations based on the Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 8.5 emissions scenario is able to reproduce AOGCM simulations of T max and T min based on predictor time series from an RCP 4.5 emissions scenario; (2) access to hemisphere average land and ocean temperatures as predictors improves the variance that can be explained, particularly over the oceans; (3) regression model fit coefficients derived from individual simulations based on the RCP 2.6, 4.5 and 8.5 emissions scenarios agree well over most regions of the globe (the Arctic is the exception); (4) training the CPSM on concatenated time series from an ensemble of simulations does not result in fit coefficients that explain significantly more of the variance than an approach that weights results based on single simulation fits; and (5) the inclusion of a linear time dependence in the regression model fit coefficients improves the variance explained, primarily over the oceans.
format Text
author Kremser, S.
Bodeker, G. E.
Lewis, J.
spellingShingle Kremser, S.
Bodeker, G. E.
Lewis, J.
Methodological aspects of a pattern-scaling approach to produce global fields of monthly means of daily maximum and minimum temperature
author_facet Kremser, S.
Bodeker, G. E.
Lewis, J.
author_sort Kremser, S.
title Methodological aspects of a pattern-scaling approach to produce global fields of monthly means of daily maximum and minimum temperature
title_short Methodological aspects of a pattern-scaling approach to produce global fields of monthly means of daily maximum and minimum temperature
title_full Methodological aspects of a pattern-scaling approach to produce global fields of monthly means of daily maximum and minimum temperature
title_fullStr Methodological aspects of a pattern-scaling approach to produce global fields of monthly means of daily maximum and minimum temperature
title_full_unstemmed Methodological aspects of a pattern-scaling approach to produce global fields of monthly means of daily maximum and minimum temperature
title_sort methodological aspects of a pattern-scaling approach to produce global fields of monthly means of daily maximum and minimum temperature
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-7-249-2014
https://gmd.copernicus.org/articles/7/249/2014/
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Climate change
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