Litcius/Paper detail

Climate Sensitivity and the Direct Effect of Carbon Dioxide in a Limited-Area Cloud-Resolving Model

David M. Romps

2020Journal of Climate30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Even in a small domain, it can be prohibitively expensive to run cloud-resolving greenhouse gas warming experiments due to the long equilibration time. Here, a technique is introduced that reduces the computational cost of these experiments by an order of magnitude: instead of fixing the carbon dioxide concentration and equilibrating the sea surface temperature (SST), this technique fixes the SST and equilibrates the carbon dioxide concentration. Using this approach in a cloud-resolving model of radiative–convective equilibrium (RCE), the equilibrated SST is obtained as a continuous function of carbon dioxide concentrations spanning 1 ppmv to nearly 10 000 ppmv, revealing a dramatic increase in equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS) at higher temperatures. This increase in ECS is due to both an increase in forcing and a decrease in the feedback parameter. In addition, the technique is used to obtain the direct effects of carbon dioxide (i.e., the rapid adjustments) over a wide range of SSTs. Overall, the direct effect of carbon dioxide offsets a quarter of the increase in precipitation from warming, reduces the shallow cloud fraction by a small amount, and has no impact on convective available potential energy (CAPE).

Topics & Concepts

Carbon dioxideEnvironmental scienceClimate sensitivityGreenhouse gasAtmospheric sciencesCloud forcingRadiative forcingForcing (mathematics)Cloud coverClimatologyClimate modelPrecipitationCloud feedbackGlobal warmingClimate changeCloud computingMeteorologyChemistryGeologyPhysicsOceanographyOperating systemComputer scienceOrganic chemistryClimate variability and modelsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsAtmospheric chemistry and aerosols