Publication | Open Access
Representing El Niño in Coupled Ocean–Atmosphere GCMs: The Dominant Role of the Atmospheric Component
153
Citations
34
References
2004
Year
EngineeringCoupled Ocean–atmosphere GcmsClimate ModelingEarth System ScienceEarth ScienceAtmosphere ModelAtmospheric ComponentMarine MeteorologyNumerical Weather PredictionAtmospheric ScienceEl NiñoAtmospheric ModelingNew Modular StrategyClimate ChangeClimate VariabilityHydrometeorologyMeteorologyAir-sea InteractionsGeographyAtmosphere ResolutionOceanic ForcingClimate SystemClimate DynamicsClimatologyGlobal ClimateClimate Modelling
Abstract A systematic modular approach to investigate the respective roles of the ocean and atmosphere in setting El Niño characteristics in coupled general circulation models is presented. Several state-of-the-art coupled models sharing either the same atmosphere or the same ocean are compared. Major results include 1) the dominant role of the atmosphere model in setting El Niño characteristics (periodicity and base amplitude) and errors (regularity) and 2) the considerable improvement of simulated El Niño power spectra—toward lower frequency—when the atmosphere resolution is significantly increased. Likely reasons for such behavior are briefly discussed. It is argued that this new modular strategy represents a generic approach to identifying the source of both coupled mechanisms and model error and will provide a methodology for guiding model improvement.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1