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The Impact of ARM on Climate ModelingClimate models are among humanity's most ambitious and elaborate creations. They are designed to simulate the interactions of the atmosphere, ocean, land surface, and cryosphere on time scales far beyond the limits of deterministic predictability, and including the effects of time-dependent external forcings. The processes involved include radiative transfer, fluid dynamics, microphysics, and some aspects of geochemistry, biology, and ecology. The models explicitly simulate processes on spatial scales ranging from the circumference of the Earth down to one hundred kilometers or smaller, and implicitly include the effects of processes on even smaller scales down to a micron or so. The atmospheric component of a climate model can be called an atmospheric global circulation model (AGCM). In an AGCM, calculations are done on a three-dimensional grid, which in some of today's climate models consists of several million grid cells. For each grid cell, about a dozen variables are time-stepped as the model integrates forward from its initial conditions. These so-called prognostic variables have special importance because they are the only things that a model remembers from one time step to the next; everything else is recreated on each time step by starting from the prognostic variables and the boundary conditions. The prognostic variables typically include information about the mass of dry air, the temperature, the wind components, water vapor, various condensed-water species, and at least a few chemical species such as ozone. A good way to understand how climate models work is to consider the lengthy and complex process used to develop one. Lets imagine that a new AGCM is to be created, starting from a blank piece of paper. The model may be intended for a particular class of applications, e.g., high-resolution simulations on time scales of a few decades. Before a single line of code is written, the conceptual foundation of the model must be designed through a creative envisioning that starts from the intended application and is based on current understanding of how the atmosphere works and the inventory of mathematical methods available.
Document ID
20160010309
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Book Chapter
Authors
Randall, David A.
(Colorado State Univ. Fort Collins, CO, United States)
Del Genio, Anthony D.
(NASA Goddard Inst. for Space Studies New York, NY, United States)
Donner, Leo J.
(Princeton Univ. NJ, United States)
Collins, William D.
(California Univ., Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. Berkeley, CA, United States)
Klein, Stephen A.
(Lawrence Livermore National Lab. Livermore, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2016
Publication Date
July 15, 2016
Publication Information
Publication: The Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program: The First 20 Years
Publisher: American Meteorological Society
Volume: 57
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN34420
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: DOE DE-AC52-07NA27344
WBS: WBS 199008.02.04.10U864.15
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
atmospheric circulation
climate models
atmospheric models

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