4.6 Article

The response of US summer rainfall to quadrupled CO2 climate change in conventional and superparameterized versions of the NCAR community atmosphere model

Journal

JOURNAL OF ADVANCES IN MODELING EARTH SYSTEMS
Volume 6, Issue 3, Pages 859-882

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2014MS000306

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Center for Multiscale Modeling of Atmospheric Processes, National Science Foundation, Science and Technology Center [ATM-0425247]
  2. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research [DE-SC0000658]
  3. National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Research Fellowship [AGS-1349579]
  4. National Science Foundation, Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment [TG-ATM100027, TG-ATM130043]
  5. Department of Energy
  6. Directorate For Geosciences
  7. Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences [1048995] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  8. Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences
  9. Directorate For Geosciences [1349579] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Observations and regional climate modeling (RCM) studies demonstrate that global climate models (GCMs) are unreliable for predicting changes in extreme precipitation. Yet RCM climate change simulations are subject to boundary conditions provided by GCMs and do not interact with large-scale dynamical feedbacks that may be critical to the overall regional response. Limitations of both global and regional modeling approaches contribute significant uncertainty to future rainfall projections. Progress requires a modeling framework capable of capturing the observed regional-scale variability of rainfall intensity without sacrificing planetary scales. Here the United States summer rainfall response to quadrupled CO2 climate change is investigated using conventional (CAM) and superparameterized (SPCAM) versions of the NCAR Community Atmosphere Model. The superparameterization approach, in which cloud-resolving model arrays are embedded in GCM grid columns, improves rainfall statistics and convective variability in global simulations. A set of 5 year time-slice simulations, with prescribed sea surface temperature and sea ice boundary conditions harvested from preindustrial and abrupt four times CO2 coupled Community Earth System Model (CESM/CAM) simulations, are compared for CAM and SPCAM. The two models produce very different changes in mean precipitation patterns, which develop from differences in large-scale circulation anomalies associated with the planetary-scale response to warming. CAM shows a small decrease in overall rainfall intensity, with an increased contribution from the weaker parameterized convection and a decrease from large-scale precipitation. SPCAM has the opposite response, a significant shift in rainfall occurrence toward higher precipitation rates including more intense propagating Central United States mesoscale convective systems in a four times CO2 climate.

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