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Predicting the Earth System Across Scales: Both Ways Greg Holland NCAR Summary: Rationale Approach and Current Focus Improved Simulation of Tropical Modes Requirements for Tropical Cyclone Response to Climate Change Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Rationale: Regional Climate • Downscaling • Upscaling Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Downscaling and Upscaling: Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Trends North Atlantic Tropical Cyclones 1905-2005 30 Satellites Tropical Cyclone Number Individual Year 25 20 15 10 5 9-Year Running Mean 0 1900 1920 1940 1960 1995 1980 2000 2020 Year Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Upscaling: Mean Rainfall Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Upscaling and Downscaling: Tropical Modes Observed CCSM (Lin et al 2006) All tropical modes are poorly handled by current climate models. This impacts everything from tropical cyclones to ENSO and interactions with the extratropics. Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL The Opportunity CCSM/CAM Community Models WRF Community Model Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Approach and Current Focus Approach: Nesting the NCAR Weather Research and Forecasting Model into CAM as a 2-way Nested Regional Climate Model (NRCM); – Stage 1: Downscaling over North America (done); – Stage 2: 2-way atmospheric scale interactions in the tropics (current); – Stage 3: NRCM in CAM/CCSM, with coupled ocean model; as a community facility (next). Current Focus: Tropical scale interactions: – Importance of mesoscale organization of convection and its related surface exchanges and radiative influences for forcing tropical modes; – Tropical mode forcing of tropical cyclone development and intensification. Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Model Setup Tropical Channel, 36 km, N/S boundaries 1-way nested into NCEP Reanalysis with specified SST, Kain-Fritsch Cu Parameterization, CAM radiation and YSU boundary layer. Precipitable Water (mm) Wind Speed (m/s) 4 km nested domain inside 12 km and 36 km domains, fully 2-way interactive, Dudia cloud physics, CAM radiation and YSU boundary layer. Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL NRCM Experiments • CAM at T170 Resolution: Jan 1, 1966 to Jan 1 2001 • 36km Channel Model: Jan 1, 1996 to Jan 1, 2001 • 36km Channel + high resolution SST's: Jan 1, 1999 to Jan 1, 2000 • 36km Channel + fluxes: Jan 1, 1996 to Jan 1 1998 • 36km Channel + 12km Maritime domain: Jan 1, 1996 to Feb 12, 1998 • 36km Channel + 12/4km Maritime domains: Jan 1, 1997 to Jul 1, 1997 Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Precipitable Water: 1997 Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Power Spectra NCEP Analysis NRCM Simulation Inertia-Gravity Modes present, but too small Improved Rossby Wave, Kelvin and MJO Modes Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL MJO and Easterly Wave Simulation Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL July 22nd over eastern Indonesia MJO wet phase 28 days August 19th in eastern North Pacific 39 days October 8th westerly wind burst Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Easterly Wave Interactions with MJO 0722:00 0711:12 0701:12 0715:12 0705:12 0718:12 0708:12 0722:12 Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL NRCM Tropical Cyclone Simulation: Seasonal Distribution 1996-1998 5.0 6.0 NIO NRCM NIO OBS Number of TCs Number of TCs 6.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 - 5.0 Simulated Observed ENP NRCM ENP OBS 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 Month 6.0 5.0 SIO OBS 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 5.0 6.0 SWP NRCM SWP OBS 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Month 8 9 10 11 12 Holland, 1 2CCSM 3 4 5 Workshop 6 7 8 9 10 11 0606 12 Month Number of TCs SIO NRCM Number of TCs Number of TCs 6.0 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 8 9 10 11 12 Month 5.0 NAT NRCM NAT OBS 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Month ESSL Annual Tropical Cyclone Statistics 35 20 15 SWIO WAUS SWP NWP ENP NAT 35 25 20 15 10 SWIO WAUS SWP NIO NWP ENP OBS NRCM OBS NRCM OBS NRCM OBS NRCM OBS NRCM OBS NRCM OBS 5 0 SWP NWP NAT OBS ENP OBS ENP NAT NRCM ENP NRCM WNP OBS WNP NRCM NIO OBS NIO NAT Yellow are Observed; Blue are Simulated. 1998 NRCM Annual Number 30 SWIO WAUS SWP OBS OBS NRCM OBS NRCM OBS OBS NIO NRCM OBS OBS NRCM 0 NRCM 0 NRCM 5 OBS 5 NRCM 10 NIO NRCM 10 SWP NRCM 15 1997 Waus OBS 20 25 Waus NRCM 25 SWIO OBS Annual Number 30 SWIO NRCM 1996 30 Annual Number 35 SWIO: Southwest Indian Ocean; WAUS: Western Australia SWP: Southwest Pacific NIO: North Indian Ocean; NWP: Northwest Pacific; ENP: Eastern North Pacific; NAT: North Atlantic. NAT Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change 1900 1950 2000 30 EA SST Anomaly (C) 25 1 20 0.5 15 10 0 5 Number of Tropical Cyclones 1850 1.5 -0.5 1850 1900 1950 2000 0 Year Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL AEW Development Total Tropical Cycones vs East Atlantic SST Year 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 2020 8 26.8 7 26.6 6 26.4 5 26.2 4 Est Atlantic SST TC's Forming <20 Lat 26 R=0.65 9-y Running Mean 25.8 1900 1920 1940 3 Number of Tropical Cyclones SST (C) 1900 27 1960 1980 2000 2 2020 Year Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Importance of AEW Development 6 Equatorial 90% Category 5 4 92% 3 81% 2 55% 1 36% 0 42% 0 10 20 30 Genesis Latitude 40 50 (Data 1945-2004) >85% of all Major Hurricanes develop from Easterly Waves!!! Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL East/West Atlantic and Gulf SSTs 0.60 EA 9-Y 0.40 WA 9-Y GM 9-Y 0.20 (0.20) (0.40) (0.60) 1850 1900 1950 Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 2000 ESSL Global Surface Temperature Variability Volcano 1970 Solar Sulfate 0.60 EA 9-Y 0.40 SST Anomaly EPAC 9-Y There is 0.20 no known natural forcing mechanism that can explain the surface temperature increases since 1960 (Meehl et al 2004, 2006) Ozone (0.20) (0.40) Notice the warm 1940-50 period in the “natural cycle” (0.60) 1850 The NAO 1900 1950 2000 Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 Year ESSL So what is happening? Compare the record 2005 season with a mean of 1991-1993: • 2005: 27 Storms, 12 hurricanes, 5 cat 4-5; • 1991-1993: 22 storms (total), 12 hurricanes, 2 cat 4-5 • 2995 30% of all AEWs became named storms (normally 10%); • AEWs produced 10 of the 14 hurricanes in 2005, all category 3-5 hurricanes, all tropical cyclones in July and August, and 8 of the 11 tropical cyclones in September and October. Two AEWs also generated two tropical cyclones each, a rare event that last occurred in 1988; • For 1991-1993 only one hurricane developed from AEWs, there were no July storms and only one in October. Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL 2005 vs 1991-1993 Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL NAT SST-Hurricane Relationships 7000 km Min OLR SS S 5 4S1 5 3 54 S S Max SST 21S 3 Tropical cyclone formation locations North Atlantic oceanic and atmospheric response to global warming. Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Vorticity Changes; du/dx<0 July 2005 Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Assessing Potential Climate Change Impact on Tropical Cyclones: Requirements • Resolve hurricane structure • Simulate tropical atmospheric response to oceanic heat changes • Simulate tropical modes accurately • Simulate feedback between hurricanes and ocean/atmospheric circulations Coupling CCSM/CAM with WRF and a GOM/ROM enables this Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL Summary • The weather and climate scales are part of a continuum of action across scales; • We have the tools in CAM/CCSM and WRF to open up new frontiers in understanding and predicting these 2-way interactions; • The Petascale Computing Facility provides the capacity; So Lets Do It Thank You Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 ESSL