Precipitation and Moisture in Four Leading CMIP5 Models: Biases across Large-Scale Circulation Regimes and Their Attribution to Dynamic and Thermodynamic Factors

Author:

Yang Mengmiao1ORCID,Zhang Guang J.2,Sun De-Zheng3

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Earth System Modeling, Department of Earth System Science, Tsinghua University, and Joint Center for Global Change Studies, Beijing, China

2. Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, California, and Department for Earth System Science, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China

3. Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado

Abstract

As key variables in general circulation models, precipitation and moisture in four leading models from CMIP5 (phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project) are analyzed, with a focus on four tropical oceanic regions. It is found that precipitation in these models is overestimated in most areas. However, moisture bias has large intermodel differences. The model biases in precipitation and moisture are further examined in conjunction with large-scale circulation by regime-sorting analysis. Results show that all models consistently overestimate the frequency of occurrence of strong upward motion regimes and peak descending regimes of 500-hPa vertical velocity [Formula: see text]. In a given [Formula: see text] regime, models produce too much precipitation compared to observation and reanalysis. But for moisture, their biases differ from model to model and also from level to level. Furthermore, error causes are revealed through decomposing contribution biases into dynamic and thermodynamic components. For precipitation, the contribution errors in strong upward motion regimes are attributed to the overly frequent [Formula: see text]. In the weak upward motion regime, the biases in the dependence of precipitation on [Formula: see text] and the [Formula: see text] probability density function (PDF) make comparable contributions, but often of opposite signs. On the other hand, the biases in column-integrated water vapor contribution are mainly due to errors in the frequency of occurrence of [Formula: see text], while thermodynamic components contribute little. These findings suggest that errors in the frequency of [Formula: see text] occurrence are a significant cause of biases in the precipitation and moisture simulation.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China Grant

U.S. National Science Foundation Grant

U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research Program

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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