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TSI data@ http://spot.colorado.edu/~koppg/TSI/ Modeling Climate Response to Variations in Spectral Solar Irradiance Bob Cahalan, NASA/Goddard/Climate&RadiationLab Guoyong Wen, NASA/Goddard & Morgan State U David Rind & Jeff Jonas, NASA/GISS & Columbia U Spectral Solar Irradiance (SSI) Forcing Scenarios Simple Radiative-Convective Model (RCM) Time Lags for 11-year and multi-decadal changes Conclusions SORCE Observations of Spectral Solar Irradiance (SSI) Harder et al, 2009: GRL 36, L0701, doi:10.1029/2008GL036797 TSI & SSI do not vary in-phase – – Before Sorce, models assumed fixed spectral shape T<Tave brightening, T>Tave dimming Near-UV and Visible Are Compensating – UV variability much larger, but offset by the Visible Large UV variability impacts stratospheric temperature and ozone SORCE-SIM Better Explains Mesospheric Ozone Trends Results from Merkel et al. (GRL, 2011) O3 Difference (%) Avg. 15ºN-15ºS • • • Using NCAR’s Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model Modeled equatorial atmospheric ozone changes, forced by NRL and SORCE SSI. Compared to SABER ozone observations. Higher SORCE UV variability improves model/data agreement of mesospheric ozone. Latitude Enhanced HOx photochemistry with greater SORCE solar UV variability But solar max – min equilibrium simulations neglect timelags! Absorption of Solar Radiation O3 Hartley bands Huggins bands Chappuis bands O2-A band H2O 0.72 m 0.82 m 0.94 m 1.14 m 1.38 m 1.87 m 175nm 1 2 3 2 ------UV-C UV 4 5 6 7 UV-B 8 9 VIS NIR UV-A %TSI: 8% UV (6% UV-A), 39% VIS, 53% NIR 10 11 10 m Radiative Convective Model (RCM) • Tropical Atmosphere: Convective adjustment scheme with water vapor feedback (Manabe and Weatherald, 1967) with 18 vertical layers (2 hPa ≈ 43 km) Set Cloud Fraction = 0.0, tune Horizontal Flux to get T(Sfc) = 300 K Ocean: Heat diffusion with 4 layers, coupled with atmosphere through energy exchange (Schlesinger et al., 1985) Model Inputs SSI at 11 bands as a function of time Surface albedo Convective scheme (fixed lapse rate) Water vapor property (fixed RH) Net horizontal flux Cloud Fraction, LWP/IWP, heights Aerosol optical thickness Thickness ΔZ (m) Heat capacity Co (Wm-2yrK-1) Atmos. - Ocean Heat Transport λa,o, λk (Wm-2yrK1) Diffusivity (ΔZ λk/ρCo) (cm2s-1) 8.00 Ocean layer k=1 50 6.25 10.84 3.23 2 200 26.57 4.60 3.84 3 500 66.44 0.98 1.52 4 800 106.30 Atmosphere–Ocean Response to Instantaneous CO2 Doubling Atmosphere: initial rapid response, followed by slow response slaved to ocean Atmospheric temperature responses to instantaneous CO2 doubling in first 16 years. Dashed lines for stratospheric temperatures from theoretical computation with e-folding time of 7 days for upper stratosphere (~2 mb) and 18 days for the middle stratosphere (~20mb). RCM 2xCO2 Climate Change Surface air and ocean temperature responses for 16y & 1600y. RCM Centennial Climate Change - Forcing (Left): In-phase spectral solar forcing (blue for UV, green for VIS, and red for NIR). Top panel: at the TOA (upper panel), thicker curves for incoming radiation, thinner curves for the net radiative flux (down minus up). Bottom panel: the net radiative flux at the tropopause. (Right): Similar to the left panel except for the out-of-phase scenario. RCM Centennial Climate Change - Response (Left) Temperature responses to the in-phase spectral solar forcing scenario. Top panel: stratospheric responses, dark blue for upper stratosphere at ~2mb, lighter blue for middle stratosphere at ~20 mb. Middle Panel: tropospheric responses, red for tropopause at ~100 m, brown for surface. Bottom Panel: temperature responses of four ocean layers. The curve with largest amplitude is for top layer. The curve with smallest amplitude is for bottom layer. (Right): Similar to left panel except for out-of-phase forcing scenario UV,VIS,NIR, TSI Forcing at TOA Left: Krivova; Right: Harder Blue: UV; Green: VIS; Red:NIR; Black: TSI 20mb Surface 2mb 100mb 0-50m 750-1550m Left Panel: Temperature responses to the SATIRE-T (Krivova, 2010) reconstructed in-phase SSI. Top panel: stratospheric responses, dark blue for upper stratosphere at ~2mb, light blue for middle stratosphere at ~20 mb. Middle Panel: tropospheric responses, red for tropopause at ~100 mb, brown for surface. Bottom Panel: temperature responses of four ocean layers. The curve with largest amplitude is for the top layer. The curve with smallest amplitude is for the bottom layer. Right Panel: similar to the left panel except for responses to SIM-derived out-of-phase SSI in the right panel for solar forcing. RCM Multi-decadal Climate Change Both in-phase and out-of-phase forcings lead to warming. Out-of-phase forcing leads to ~0.7 K increase in upper stratosphere temperature, about 5 times larger than in-phase. Out-of-phase forcing leads to ~0.05K increase in surface temperature, about half as large as in-phase forcing. Even for constant TSI, atmospheric temperatures can have responses to spectral solar forcing. Out-of-phase SSI changes may cause atmospheric stability to vary from solar max to solar min, leading to cloud feedbacks that may amplify climate responses. GCM Model for Centennial Studies • GISS GCMAM (Rind, D., J. Lerner, J. Jonas, and C. McLinden, 2007: The effects of resolution and model physics on tracer transports in the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies general circulation models. J. Geophys. Res., 112, D09315, doi:10.1029/2006JD007476) • 4x5, 53 Layers, top at ~85 Km • LINOZ simplified ozone chemistry in stratosphere • Coupled Atm-Ocean version, using Russell et al. ocean (updated from: Russell, G.L., J.R. Miller, and D. Rind, 1995: A coupled atmosphere-ocean model for transient climate change studies. Atmos.-Ocean, 33, 683-730.) GCM Experiments for Centennial Studies • 2 Coupled atmosphere-ocean control runs with 1600 pre-industrial conditions (atmosphere composition and solar irradiance) – One control run for each solar spectrum – Integrated for 500 years • 2 Transient solar irradiance experiments started from year 100 of the respective control runs – Integrated for 410 years GCM Multi-decadal Climate Change Global average temperature responses to the two scenarios are similar. The difference is large in surface temperatures. This is different from the RCM. Snow and ice cover has larger and different responses in the two scenarios. Out-of-phase forcing leads to ~0.05K increase in surface temperature, about half as large as in-phase forcing.