General circulation model simulations of Southern African regional climate.

Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersraild, Johannesburg for the Degree of Master of Science. Six general circulation model simulations of present-day southern African climate are assessed, Each of these models are early-generation equilibrium climate models l...

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Main Author: Joubert, Alec Michael.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10539/25869
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spelling ftunivwitwaters:oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/25869 2023-06-11T04:16:37+02:00 General circulation model simulations of Southern African regional climate. Joubert, Alec Michael. 1994 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/10539/25869 en eng https://hdl.handle.net/10539/25869 Climatology -- Mathematical models Atmospheric circulation -- South Africa Africa Southern -- Climate Thesis 1994 ftunivwitwaters 2023-05-15T09:42:09Z Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersraild, Johannesburg for the Degree of Master of Science. Six general circulation model simulations of present-day southern African climate are assessed, Each of these models are early-generation equilibrium climate models linked to simple mixed-slab oceans. Simulations of surface air temperature over the subcontinent are sensitive to the grid-scale parameterisation of convection in summer. At high latitudes, large simulation errors are caused by errors in the specification of sea-ice albedo feedbacks. Increased spatial resolution and the inclusion of a gravity wave drag term in the momentum equations results in a markedly-improved simulated mean sea level pressure distribution. Tho models successfully simulate the pattern of rainfall seasonality over the Subcontinent, although grid-point simulation of precipitation is unreliable. Treatment of convection, cloud radiative feedbacks and the oceans by this generation of models is simplistic, and consequently there is a large degree of uncertainty associated with predictions of future climate under doubled-carbon dioxide conditions. For this reason, more reliable estimates of future conditions will be achieved using only those models which reproduce present climate most accurately. Early-generation general circulation models suggest a warming of 4°C to 5°C for the southern African region as a whole throughout the year. Over the subcontinent, warming is expected to be least in the tropics, and greatest in the dry subtropical regions in winter. Estimated changes in mean sea level pressure indicate a southward shlft of all pressure systems, with a weakening of the subtropical high pressure belt and mid-latitude westerlies. Little agreement exists between the models concerning predictions of regional precipitation change. However, broad scale changes in precipitation patterns are in accordance with predicted circulation changes over the subcontinent. Generally wetter conditions may be expected ... Thesis Sea ice University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg: WITS Institutional Repository on DSpace (WIReDSpace)
institution Open Polar
collection University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg: WITS Institutional Repository on DSpace (WIReDSpace)
op_collection_id ftunivwitwaters
language English
topic Climatology -- Mathematical models
Atmospheric circulation -- South Africa
Africa
Southern -- Climate
spellingShingle Climatology -- Mathematical models
Atmospheric circulation -- South Africa
Africa
Southern -- Climate
Joubert, Alec Michael.
General circulation model simulations of Southern African regional climate.
topic_facet Climatology -- Mathematical models
Atmospheric circulation -- South Africa
Africa
Southern -- Climate
description Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersraild, Johannesburg for the Degree of Master of Science. Six general circulation model simulations of present-day southern African climate are assessed, Each of these models are early-generation equilibrium climate models linked to simple mixed-slab oceans. Simulations of surface air temperature over the subcontinent are sensitive to the grid-scale parameterisation of convection in summer. At high latitudes, large simulation errors are caused by errors in the specification of sea-ice albedo feedbacks. Increased spatial resolution and the inclusion of a gravity wave drag term in the momentum equations results in a markedly-improved simulated mean sea level pressure distribution. Tho models successfully simulate the pattern of rainfall seasonality over the Subcontinent, although grid-point simulation of precipitation is unreliable. Treatment of convection, cloud radiative feedbacks and the oceans by this generation of models is simplistic, and consequently there is a large degree of uncertainty associated with predictions of future climate under doubled-carbon dioxide conditions. For this reason, more reliable estimates of future conditions will be achieved using only those models which reproduce present climate most accurately. Early-generation general circulation models suggest a warming of 4°C to 5°C for the southern African region as a whole throughout the year. Over the subcontinent, warming is expected to be least in the tropics, and greatest in the dry subtropical regions in winter. Estimated changes in mean sea level pressure indicate a southward shlft of all pressure systems, with a weakening of the subtropical high pressure belt and mid-latitude westerlies. Little agreement exists between the models concerning predictions of regional precipitation change. However, broad scale changes in precipitation patterns are in accordance with predicted circulation changes over the subcontinent. Generally wetter conditions may be expected ...
format Thesis
author Joubert, Alec Michael.
author_facet Joubert, Alec Michael.
author_sort Joubert, Alec Michael.
title General circulation model simulations of Southern African regional climate.
title_short General circulation model simulations of Southern African regional climate.
title_full General circulation model simulations of Southern African regional climate.
title_fullStr General circulation model simulations of Southern African regional climate.
title_full_unstemmed General circulation model simulations of Southern African regional climate.
title_sort general circulation model simulations of southern african regional climate.
publishDate 1994
url https://hdl.handle.net/10539/25869
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/10539/25869
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