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High Model Temperature Bias

Hello, I'm currently running a version of CESM 1.2.2 using the fully coupled B_2000_STRATMAM7_CN componet set configureation. My research group has also added several new aerosol and cloud interaction treatments to the model but we have noticed that our global mean temperature bias compared to NCDC observation is around -2.9 deg C. This is bias is greater than what is typically accepted for global climate models and I was wondering if there are any parameters or namelist options that can be tuned or adjusted to bring the model into better agreement with the observations? Thanks,Tim Glotfelty
 

jedwards

CSEG and Liaisons
Staff member
What grid resolution are you using?   Have you compared against an unmodified version of the model to insure that you did not introduce the bias?  
 

jedwards

CSEG and Liaisons
Staff member
What grid resolution are you using?   Have you compared against an unmodified version of the model to insure that you did not introduce the bias?  
 
The grid rsolution I use is f09_g16 so 0.9x1.25 degree for the land and atmosphere and gx1v6 for the ice and ocean components. I did a run using the default out of the box B_2000_STRATMAM3_CN componet set. I couldn't use the B_2000_STRATMAM7_CN component set because there was some namelist error in the default version. The default temperature bias is still a little high -2.3 deg C which indicates my additinal aerosol and cloud changes add about -0.6 deg C to the mean bias. Tim Glotfelty
 
The grid rsolution I use is f09_g16 so 0.9x1.25 degree for the land and atmosphere and gx1v6 for the ice and ocean components. I did a run using the default out of the box B_2000_STRATMAM3_CN componet set. I couldn't use the B_2000_STRATMAM7_CN component set because there was some namelist error in the default version. The default temperature bias is still a little high -2.3 deg C which indicates my additinal aerosol and cloud changes add about -0.6 deg C to the mean bias. Tim Glotfelty
 

santos

Member
I've moved this since I think that the people who frequent the CAM forums are more likely to have an answer.
 

santos

Member
I've moved this since I think that the people who frequent the CAM forums are more likely to have an answer.
 

hannay

Cecile Hannay
AMWG Liaison
Staff member
You may need to retune your modified version of the model. 
 

hannay

Cecile Hannay
AMWG Liaison
Staff member
You may need to retune your modified version of the model. 
 

hannay

Cecile Hannay
AMWG Liaison
Staff member
From user:1) Firstly I was wondering what radiation variables from CAM5 are used to compute the radiative balance. Is is something like FSNTOA+FSNIRTOA = RESTOM or is it calculated using other variables? 2) Is the method any different because I will be tuning a current year time period (2001-2010) instead of pre-industrial (1850)?3) I also did some checking on the LWCF and SWCF from my simulations compared against CERES data. It appears that on global average the SWCF from my simulations is around 5.0 W m-2 greater (more negative) than CERES and the LWCF is about 2.0 W m-2 smaller. Based on that is there any parameters to tune that make the SWCF less negative and increase the LWCF? 4) Lastly, is there an acceptable range of values with which to adjust the parameters that you suggested to be physically realistic?
 

hannay

Cecile Hannay
AMWG Liaison
Staff member
From user:1) Firstly I was wondering what radiation variables from CAM5 are used to compute the radiative balance. Is is something like FSNTOA+FSNIRTOA = RESTOM or is it calculated using other variables? 2) Is the method any different because I will be tuning a current year time period (2001-2010) instead of pre-industrial (1850)?3) I also did some checking on the LWCF and SWCF from my simulations compared against CERES data. It appears that on global average the SWCF from my simulations is around 5.0 W m-2 greater (more negative) than CERES and the LWCF is about 2.0 W m-2 smaller. Based on that is there any parameters to tune that make the SWCF less negative and increase the LWCF? 4) Lastly, is there an acceptable range of values with which to adjust the parameters that you suggested to be physically realistic?
 

hannay

Cecile Hannay
AMWG Liaison
Staff member
1) Firstly I was wondering what radiation variables from CAM5 are used to compute the radiative balance. Is is something like FSNTOA+FSNIRTOA = RESTOM or is it calculated using other variables? In CAM5: RESTOM = FSNT - FLNT 
2) Is the method any different because I will be tuning a current year time period (2001-2010) instead of pre-industrial (1850)? The difference would be that you are not in radiative equilibrium for current time
1850 => RESTOM = 0 W/m2
2000 => RESTOM will be positive (in CERES_EBAF it is close to 0.8 W/m2) 
3) I also did some checking on the LWCF and SWCF from my simulations compared against CERES data. It appears that on global average the SWCF from my simulations is around 5.0 W m-2 greater (more negative) than CERES and the LWCF is about 2.0 W m-2 smaller. Based on that is there any parameters to tune that make the SWCF less negative and increase the LWCF? increasing rhminl will allow you to decrease SWCF (less negative) without affecting too much LWCF, but 5 W/m2 is a lot so it depends where your rhminl is nowDecreasing Dcs might help tooFOR SWCF: are you comparing to CERES or CERES-EBAF ?   4) Lastly, is there an acceptable range of values with which to adjust the parameters that you suggested to be physically realistic?rhminl is not an observable. This is the threshold from low-level cloud and it is used in the model as a tuning parameter. Personally, I  have pushed it up to 0.93.Dcs = [90-500] is probably a reasonable range (these values are coming from Andrew Gettelman). Dcs is the effective diameter at which we autoconvert to precipitation for ice crystals. So it could be refined based on observations.  
 

hannay

Cecile Hannay
AMWG Liaison
Staff member
1) Firstly I was wondering what radiation variables from CAM5 are used to compute the radiative balance. Is is something like FSNTOA+FSNIRTOA = RESTOM or is it calculated using other variables? In CAM5: RESTOM = FSNT - FLNT 
2) Is the method any different because I will be tuning a current year time period (2001-2010) instead of pre-industrial (1850)? The difference would be that you are not in radiative equilibrium for current time
1850 => RESTOM = 0 W/m2
2000 => RESTOM will be positive (in CERES_EBAF it is close to 0.8 W/m2) 
3) I also did some checking on the LWCF and SWCF from my simulations compared against CERES data. It appears that on global average the SWCF from my simulations is around 5.0 W m-2 greater (more negative) than CERES and the LWCF is about 2.0 W m-2 smaller. Based on that is there any parameters to tune that make the SWCF less negative and increase the LWCF? increasing rhminl will allow you to decrease SWCF (less negative) without affecting too much LWCF, but 5 W/m2 is a lot so it depends where your rhminl is nowDecreasing Dcs might help tooFOR SWCF: are you comparing to CERES or CERES-EBAF ?   4) Lastly, is there an acceptable range of values with which to adjust the parameters that you suggested to be physically realistic?rhminl is not an observable. This is the threshold from low-level cloud and it is used in the model as a tuning parameter. Personally, I  have pushed it up to 0.93.Dcs = [90-500] is probably a reasonable range (these values are coming from Andrew Gettelman). Dcs is the effective diameter at which we autoconvert to precipitation for ice crystals. So it could be refined based on observations.  
 
Thanks for the information it was quite helpful. I compared my SWCF against CERES-EBAF. By adjusting rhminl I was able to get an RESTOM of 0.7 W/m2 so it is comparable to CERES-EBAF. This adjustment also decresed the bias in SWCF to around -1.0 W/m2 and brought the temperature bias back down to around -2.0 degrees C annually.  Thanks for the assistance,Tim Glotfelty 
 
Thanks for the information it was quite helpful. I compared my SWCF against CERES-EBAF. By adjusting rhminl I was able to get an RESTOM of 0.7 W/m2 so it is comparable to CERES-EBAF. This adjustment also decresed the bias in SWCF to around -1.0 W/m2 and brought the temperature bias back down to around -2.0 degrees C annually.  Thanks for the assistance,Tim Glotfelty 
 

hannay

Cecile Hannay
AMWG Liaison
Staff member
Hi Tim,Thanks for your feedback. It is nice to hear that it works for you. Cecile 
 

hannay

Cecile Hannay
AMWG Liaison
Staff member
Hi Tim,Thanks for your feedback. It is nice to hear that it works for you. Cecile 
 
Hi, Regarding the way you mentioned that RESTOM is calculated.I am running the B_1850 compset with CESM 1.2.2 I am trying to calculate RESTOM by doing FSNT minus FLNT, then I do a global spatial average and I get around -29 W/m2 (in average for 30 years of simulation).I have the feeling that I am doing something wrong but not sure what. You mentioned that FSNT- FLNT is for CAM5, does this may have to do with the fact that B_1850 uses CAM4 and then I need to do the calculation differently?Thanks*******UPDATE:*******I just realized I had to do a weighted spatial average and I got -0.02 W/m2.This brings me to another question. The reason I was using B_1850 is because is cheaper than B_1850_CN and the CN is not so relevant for my research purposes. But I have seen that B_1850 is not a scientifically validated compset as opposed to B_1850_CN.So I was trying to check RESTOM as one of the metrics to see how good this compset is.My questions are:1) What else (other metrics) should I check to make sure this COMPSET is as good as a 'scientifically validated' one?2) In the scientifically validated compstets webpage, B_1850_CN appears with model version 1.0.x.Does that means that it is only validated for that version of the model? So if I run it on 1.2.2 is not scientifically validated anyway?Cheers,Bryam  
 
Hi, Regarding the way you mentioned that RESTOM is calculated.I am running the B_1850 compset with CESM 1.2.2 I am trying to calculate RESTOM by doing FSNT minus FLNT, then I do a global spatial average and I get around -29 W/m2 (in average for 30 years of simulation).I have the feeling that I am doing something wrong but not sure what. You mentioned that FSNT- FLNT is for CAM5, does this may have to do with the fact that B_1850 uses CAM4 and then I need to do the calculation differently?Thanks*******UPDATE:*******I just realized I had to do a weighted spatial average and I got -0.02 W/m2.This brings me to another question. The reason I was using B_1850 is because is cheaper than B_1850_CN and the CN is not so relevant for my research purposes. But I have seen that B_1850 is not a scientifically validated compset as opposed to B_1850_CN.So I was trying to check RESTOM as one of the metrics to see how good this compset is.My questions are:1) What else (other metrics) should I check to make sure this COMPSET is as good as a 'scientifically validated' one?2) In the scientifically validated compstets webpage, B_1850_CN appears with model version 1.0.x.Does that means that it is only validated for that version of the model? So if I run it on 1.2.2 is not scientifically validated anyway?Cheers,Bryam  
 

hannay

Cecile Hannay
AMWG Liaison
Staff member
Scientific validation of CESM consists of a multi-decadal model run of the given component set at the target resolution, followed by scientific review of the model output diagnostics. All scientifically supported component sets are also accompanied by diagnostic and model output data. If a comspet is not scientifically validated, it means we didn't go through thsi process. But it doesn't mean that you would get something incorrect. It just means that we didn't test this configuration. So you would have to do a run (long enough enough - the length depends which component you are looking at), then analyze the simulation to make sure it looks fine. You could compare with another run. For teh atmosphere, you would loke to cloud forcing, radiative fluxes, precipitation, TS, for instance. 
 
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