A PHYSICALLY-BASED SCHEME FOR THE TREATMENT OF STRATIFORM CLOUDS AND PRECIPITATION IN LARGE-SCALE MODELS - 2 - COMPARISON OF MODELED AND OBSERVED CLIMATOLOGICAL FIELDS
Ld. Rotstayn, A PHYSICALLY-BASED SCHEME FOR THE TREATMENT OF STRATIFORM CLOUDS AND PRECIPITATION IN LARGE-SCALE MODELS - 2 - COMPARISON OF MODELED AND OBSERVED CLIMATOLOGICAL FIELDS, Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 124(546), 1998, pp. 389-415
Fields from two experiments performed with 18-level versions of the Co
mmonwealth Scientific and Industrial Organization (CSIRO) global clima
te model (GCM) are compared with observed fields, focusing on quantiti
es related to clouds and precipitation. The first experiment (denoted
by PROG) employed a new prognostic treatment of stratiform clouds and
precipitation, while the second experiment (denoted by DIAG18) employe
d a diagnostic treatment, similar to that used in the standard 9-level
CSIRO GCM. The main findings are as follows. Global-mean quantities a
gree well with observations, although the global cloudiness in both ru
ns is a little lower than observed values. Zonal-mean fields generally
show good to very good agreement with observations, particularly in t
he PROG run, where marked improvements in the cloudiness and long-wave
cloud radiative forcing (LWCF) at high latitudes are noted. The PROG
run has cloud-liquid-water paths (LWPs) that are larger over mid-latit
ude oceans than those from satellite retrievals. Geographical distribu
tions of precipitation, cloudiness, LWCF and SWCF (short-wave cloud ra
diative forcing) from both runs are generally in reasonable agreement
with observations. Overall, the cloudiness and LWCF are somewhat more
realistic in the PROG run, the SWCF is slightly more realistic in the
DIAG18 run, and the precipitation is not greatly affected by the chang
e of cloud scheme. Problems affecting both runs to some degree are: de
ficient cloudiness in the subtropics, and to a lesser extent in mid-la
titudes; deficient SWCF in mid-latitudes, with a tendency towards exce
ssive SWCF at low latitudes; deficient LWCF over land, mainly in the t
ropics and northern mid-latitudes; excessive precipitation, cloudiness
and cloud radiative forcing in the tropical western Pacific Ocean in
July. The reasons for the above findings are investigated, in part, vi
a the use of sensitivity tests. The improved high-latitude cloudiness
in the PROG run results from (a) replacement of a cloudiness parametri
zation based on relative humidity with one based on a generalized rela
tive humidity that includes the contribution from cloud water, and (b)
inclusion of the effect of frozen precipitation processes on the clou
d fraction. The improved LWCF is primarily the result of more realisti
c treatment of cloud emissivity in the prognostic cloud scheme. The ex
cessive LWPs over mid-latitude oceans in the PROG run can be corrected
by a modest reduction in the critical cloud droplet radius that contr
ols the onset of autoconversion. The deficient cloudiness in the subtr
opics and mid-latitudes (typical of current GCMs) can be improved by s
imple changes to the critical relative humidities used to control the
onset of cloud formation or by an increase of vertical resolution, but
this improvement comes at the cost of excessive cloudiness in the tro
pics. The errors in the modelled SWCF (also typical of current GCMs) s
uggest that there is a systematic latitudinal bias in the calculation
of cloud-radiation interactions, such as the effect of solar zenith an
gle. The deficient LWCF over land is related to a deficiency of high c
loud. The vigorous circulation in July over the tropical western Pacif
ic is much more prominent in these 18-level simulations than in the st
andard 9-level version of the model, and is related to aspects of the
model other than the cloud treatment.