Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory, NCAR

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Presentation transcript:

Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory, NCAR The challenges of evaluating global climate models with the limited observational record. Isla Simpson Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory, NCAR

My Perspective: Typically aiming to evaluate the representation of dynamical processes within the atmospheric component of global climate models

My Perspective: Typically aiming to evaluate the representation of dynamical processes within the atmospheric component of global climate models Issues

My Perspective: Typically aiming to evaluate the representation of dynamical processes within the atmospheric component of global climate models Issues The quality of observation based products.

My Perspective: Typically aiming to evaluate the representation of dynamical processes within the atmospheric component of global climate models Issues The quality of observation based products. The limited sampling of the real world over the short observational record.

My Perspective: Typically aiming to evaluate the representation of dynamical processes within the atmospheric component of global climate models Issues The quality of observation based products. The limited sampling of the real world over the short observational record. While the impact of natural internal variability and limited sampling has been brought to the forefront recently through the use of large ensembles of model simulations (Hoerling et al 1997, Sardeshmukh and Kumar 2000, Deser et al 2012, Deser et al 2014, Kay et al 2015, Deser et al 2016).

My Perspective: Typically aiming to evaluate the representation of dynamical processes within the atmospheric component of global climate models Issues The quality of observation based products. The limited sampling of the real world over the short observational record. While the impact of natural internal variability and limited sampling has been brought to the forefront recently through the use of large ensembles of model simulations (Hoerling et al 1997, Sardeshmukh and Kumar 2000, Deser et al 2012, Deser et al 2014, Kay et al 2015, Deser et al 2016). The impact of limited sampling on our observation based analyses continues to be underappreciated in our field.

How do we deal with this issue? The combined use of model ensembles and appropriate statistical analysis of the observations can make us aware of the limitations of our observational analysis. Where we can say our models are in error and where we can’t.

How do we deal with this issue? The combined use of model ensembles and appropriate statistical analysis of the observations can make us aware of the limitations of our observational analysis. Where we can say our models are in error and where we can’t. A more process based view of model errors e.g., analysis of short term forecast errors can allow us to identify erroneous processes.

How do we deal with this issue? The combined use of model ensembles and appropriate statistical analysis of the observations can make us aware of the limitations of our observational analysis. Where we can say our models are in error and where we can’t. A more process based view of model errors e.g., analysis of short term forecast errors can allow us to identify erroneous processes.

An Example: The Northern Hemisphere circulation response to El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Deser, Simpson, McKinnon and Phillips (2017) The Northern Hemisphere Extra-tropical Atmospheric Circulation Response to ENSO: How well do we know it and how do we evaluate models accordingly? J. Clim., 30, 5059-5082 Clara Deser Karen McKinnon Adam Phillips

An Example: The Northern Hemisphere circulation response to El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) ENSO: Irregular but quasi-periodic variation in Sea Surface Temperatures in the Eastern Equatorial Pacific. Warm phase = El Nino, Cold phase = La Nina

An Example: The Northern Hemisphere circulation response to El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) ENSO: Irregular but quasi-periodic variation in Sea Surface Temperatures in the Eastern Equatorial Pacific. Warm phase = El Nino, Cold phase = La Nina Nino 3.4 region Defining Events Sea surface temperature of the Nino3.4 region of the equatorial Pacific Smooth monthly with a 3 point binomial filter, detrend, normalize by , calculate November, December, January average.

An Example: The Northern Hemisphere circulation response to El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) ENSO: Irregular but quasi-periodic variation in Sea Surface Temperatures in the Eastern Equatorial Pacific. Warm phase = El Nino, Cold phase = La Nina Nino 3.4 region Defining Events Sea surface temperature of the Nino3.4 region of the equatorial Pacific Smooth monthly with a 3 point binomial filter, detrend, normalize by , calculate November, December, January average. ERSSTv3B SST dataset back to 1920 (Smith et al 2008)

An Example: The Northern Hemisphere circulation response to El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) ENSO: Irregular but quasi-periodic variation in Sea Surface Temperatures in the Eastern Equatorial Pacific. Warm phase = El Nino, Cold phase = La Nina Nino 3.4 region Defining Events Sea surface temperature of the Nino3.4 region of the equatorial Pacific Smooth monthly with a 3 point binomial filter, detrend, normalize by , calculate November, December, January average. ERSSTv3B SST dataset back to 1920 (Smith et al 2008)

An Example: The Northern Hemisphere circulation response to El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) ENSO: Irregular but quasi-periodic variation in Sea Surface Temperatures in the Eastern Equatorial Pacific. Warm phase = El Nino, Cold phase = La Nina Nino 3.4 region Defining Events Sea surface temperature of the Nino3.4 region of the equatorial Pacific Smooth monthly with a 3 point binomial filter, detrend, normalize by , calculate November, December, January average. 18 El Nino’s 14 La Nina’s

An Example: The Northern Hemisphere circulation response to El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Contour interval = 0.5K Composite mean difference in Sea Surface Temperature between 18 El Nino and 14 La Nina events.

An Example: The Northern Hemisphere circulation response to El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) DJF Sea Level Pressure Anomalies (El Nino – La Nina) Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test Contour interval = 0.5K Composite mean difference in Sea Surface Temperature between 18 El Nino and 14 La Nina events. Composite mean difference in Sea Level Pressure between 18 El Nino and 14 La Nina events. 20th Century Reanalysis

An Example: The Northern Hemisphere circulation response to El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) DJF Sea Level Pressure Anomalies (El Nino – La Nina) Deepening of the Aleutian Low Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test Contour interval = 0.5K Composite mean difference in Sea Surface Temperature between 18 El Nino and 14 La Nina events. Composite mean difference in Sea Level Pressure between 18 El Nino and 14 La Nina events. 20th Century Reanalysis

An Example: The Northern Hemisphere circulation response to El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) DJF Sea Level Pressure Anomalies (El Nino – La Nina) Deepening of the Aleutian Low Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test Contour interval = 0.5K Connections to North Atlantic SLP Composite mean difference in Sea Surface Temperature between 18 El Nino and 14 La Nina events. Composite mean difference in Sea Level Pressure between 18 El Nino and 14 La Nina events. 20th Century Reanalysis

How well do our global climate models capture this connection? An Example: The Northern Hemisphere circulation response to El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) DJF Sea Level Pressure Anomalies (El Nino – La Nina) Deepening of the Aleutian Low Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test Contour interval = 0.5K How well do our global climate models capture this connection? Connections to North Atlantic SLP Composite mean difference in Sea Surface Temperature between 18 El Nino and 14 La Nina events. Composite mean difference in Sea Level Pressure between 18 El Nino and 14 La Nina events. 20th Century Reanalysis

Evaluating the ENSO response in NCAR’s Community Earth System Model (CESM)

Simulations run from 1920 to 2013 Evaluating the ENSO response in NCAR’s Community Earth System Model (CESM) “Pacemaker” Experiments: freely running fully coupled global climate model (atmosphere / ocean /land) but with SST anomalies in the equatorial Pacific nudged toward observations. (similar conclusions if you run atmosphere only with prescribed SST’s) Simulations run from 1920 to 2013

Simulations run from 1920 to 2013 Evaluating the ENSO response in NCAR’s Community Earth System Model (CESM) “Pacemaker” Experiments: freely running fully coupled global climate model (atmosphere / ocean /land) but with SST anomalies in the equatorial Pacific nudged toward observations. (similar conclusions if you run atmosphere only with prescribed SST’s) Sea surface temperatures nudged toward observed anomalies Ocean freely evolving elsewhere Simulations run from 1920 to 2013

Simulations run from 1920 to 2013 Evaluating the ENSO response in NCAR’s Community Earth System Model (CESM) “Pacemaker” Experiments: freely running fully coupled global climate model (atmosphere / ocean /land) but with SST anomalies in the equatorial Pacific nudged toward observations. (similar conclusions if you run atmosphere only with prescribed SST’s) 18 El Nino’s 14 La Nina’s Simulations run from 1920 to 2013

Simulations run from 1920 to 2013 Evaluating the ENSO response in NCAR’s Community Earth System Model (CESM) “Pacemaker” Experiments: freely running fully coupled global climate model (atmosphere / ocean /land) but with SST anomalies in the equatorial Pacific nudged toward observations. (similar conclusions if you run atmosphere only with prescribed SST’s) 10 Pacemaker ensemble members from 1920 - 2013 Differ only in their initial conditions  differ only in the random weather noise arising from these different initial conditions (butterfly effect). 18 El Nino’s 14 La Nina’s Simulations run from 1920 to 2013

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis El Nino – La Nina SLP anomalies from one Pacemaker ensemble member Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis Another Pacemaker Ensemble member that differs only from a very small atmospheric temperature perturbation to the initial conditions used to start the simulation. Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis IF the model has a realistic representation of internal variability (weather noise) then there is substantial uncertainty on the “observed” response to ENSO. Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis In this case it is realistic - From various bootstrapping analyses of the observed record IF the model has a realistic representation of internal variability (weather noise) then there is substantial uncertainty on the “observed” response to ENSO. Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Does the model captured the observed SLP difference between El Nino and La Nina? “Observed” DJF Sea Level Pressure (El Nino – La Nina) from 20th Century Reanalysis Grey = anomaly is not significantly different from zero at the 5% level using a T-test

Summary

Summary Observations are obviously vital for assessing the fidelity of our climate models

Summary Observations are obviously vital for assessing the fidelity of our climate models But, over the limited observational record there can be large uncertainties in aspects of both the observed climatology and variability of the atmosphere.

Summary Observations are obviously vital for assessing the fidelity of our climate models But, over the limited observational record there can be large uncertainties in aspects of both the observed climatology and variability of the atmosphere. Ideally we’d like to have longer observational records.

Summary Observations are obviously vital for assessing the fidelity of our climate models But, over the limited observational record there can be large uncertainties in aspects of both the observed climatology and variability of the atmosphere. Ideally we’d like to have longer observational records. But, large model ensembles can provide valuable insights into these uncertainties provided that their noise/variability is similar to that of the real world.

Summary Observations are obviously vital for assessing the fidelity of our climate models But, over the limited observational record there can be large uncertainties in aspects of both the observed climatology and variability of the atmosphere. Ideally we’d like to have longer observational records. But, large model ensembles can provide valuable insights into these uncertainties provided that their noise/variability is similar to that of the real world. We can identify the limitations of our models from observations and identify the limitations of our observations from models, provided the analysis is done in the correct way and it is ensured that the models representation of the random natural variability is adequate.

Contact: islas@ucar.edu Thanks! Contact: islas@ucar.edu

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