Omens of coupled model biases in the CMIP5 AMIP simulations

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Despite decades of efforts and improvements in the representation of processes as well as in model resolution, current global climate models still suffer from a set of important, systematic biases in sea surface temperature (SST), not much different from the previous generation of climate models. Many studies have looked at errors in the wind field, cloud representation or oceanic upwelling in coupled models to explain the SST errors. In this paper we highlight the relationship between latent heat flux (LH) biases in forced atmospheric simulations and the SST biases models develop in coupled mode, at the scale of the entire intertropical domain. By analyzing 22 pairs of forced atmospheric and coupled ocean-atmosphere simulations from the CMIP5 database, we show a systematic, negative correlation between the spatial patterns of these two biases. This link between forced and coupled bias patterns is also confirmed by two sets of dedicated sensitivity experiments with the IPSL-CM5A-LR model. The analysis of the sources of the atmospheric LH bias pattern reveals that the near-surface wind speed bias dominates the zonal structure of the LH bias and that the near-surface relative humidity dominates the east–west contrasts.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2927-2941
Number of pages15
JournalClimate Dynamics
Volume51
Issue number7-8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2018

Keywords

  • AMIP simulations
  • Climate model biases
  • Coupled simulations
  • Latent heat flux
  • Sea surface temperature
  • Sensitivity tests

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