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Predicting Decade-to-Century Climate Change: Prospects for Improving ModelsRecent research has led to a greatly increased understanding of the uncertainties in today's climate models. In attempting to predict the climate of the 21st century, we must confront not only computer limitations on the affordable resolution of global models, but also a lack of physical realism in attempting to model key processes. Until we are able to incorporate adequate treatments of critical elements of the entire biogeophysical climate system, our models will remain subject to these uncertainties, and our scenarios of future climate change, both anthropogenic and natural, will not fully meet the requirements of either policymakers or the public. The areas of most-needed model improvements are thought to include air-sea exchanges, land surface processes, ice and snow physics, hydrologic cycle elements, and especially the role of aerosols and cloud-radiation interactions. Of these areas, cloud-radiation interactions are known to be responsible for much of the inter-model differences in sensitivity to greenhouse gases. Recently, we have diagnostically evaluated several current and proposed model cloud-radiation treatments against extensive field observations. Satellite remote sensing provides an indispensable component of the observational resources. Cloud-radiation parameterizations display a strong sensitivity to vertical resolution, and we find that vertical resolutions typically used in global models are far from convergence. We also find that newly developed advanced parameterization schemes with explicit cloud water budgets and interactive cloud radiative properties are potentially capable of matching observational data closely. However, it is difficult to evaluate the realism of model-produced fields of cloud extinction, cloud emittance, cloud liquid water content and effective cloud droplet radius until high-quality measurements of these quantities become more widely available. Thus, further progress will require a combination of theoretical and modeling research, together with intensified emphasis on both in situ and space-based remote sensing observations.
Document ID
19990064064
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Somerville, Richard C. J.
(Scripps Institution of Oceanography San Diego, CA United States)
Date Acquired
August 19, 2013
Publication Date
July 20, 1999
Publication Information
Publication: NASA Scientific Forum on Climate Variability and Global Change: UNISPACE 3
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: DE-FG03-90ER-61061
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG5-2238
CONTRACT_GRANT: NOAA-NA-36GP0372
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSF ATM-91-14109
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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