Affiliation:
1. Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California
Abstract
Abstract
The strength of snow-albedo feedback (SAF) in transient climate change simulations of the Fourth Assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is generally determined by the surface-albedo decrease associated with a loss of snow cover rather than the reduction in snow albedo due to snow metamorphosis in a warming climate. The large intermodel spread in SAF strength is likewise attributable mostly to the snow cover component. The spread in the strength of this component is in turn mostly attributable to a correspondingly large spread in mean effective snow albedo. Models with large effective snow albedos have a large surface-albedo contrast between snow-covered and snow-free regions and exhibit a correspondingly large surface-albedo decrease when snow cover decreases. Models without explicit treatment of the vegetation canopy in their surface-albedo calculations typically have high effective snow albedos and strong SAF, often stronger than observed. In models with explicit canopy treatment, completely snow-covered surfaces typically have lower albedos and the simulations have weaker SAF, generally weaker than observed. The authors speculate that in these models either snow albedos or canopy albedos when snow is present are too low, or vegetation shields snow-covered surfaces excessively. Detailed observations of surface albedo in a representative sampling of snow-covered surfaces would therefore be extremely useful in constraining these parameterizations and reducing SAF spread in the next generation of models.
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Reference30 articles.
1. Alekseev, V. A., E. M.Volodin, V. Y.Galin, V. P.Dymnikov, and V. N.Lykossov, 1998: Modelling of the present-day climate by the atmospheric model of INM RAS “DNM GCM.” INM Tech. Rep. N2086-B98, Institute of Numerical Mathematics, Russian Academy of Sciences, 208 pp.
2. The effect of solar radiation variations on the climate of the earth.;Budyko;Tellus,1969
3. A methodology for understanding and intercomparing atmospheric climate feedback processes in general circulation models.;Cess;J. Geophys. Res.,1988
4. Interpretation of snow-climate feedback as produced by 17 general circulation models.;Cess;Science,1991
5. The albedo of temperate and boreal forest and the Northern Hemisphere climate: A sensitivity experiment using the LMD GCM.;Chalita;Climate Dyn.,1994
Cited by
177 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献