PARASO, a circum-Antarctic fully coupled ice-sheet–ocean–sea-ice–atmosphere–land model involving f.ETISh1.7, NEMO3.6, LIM3.6, COSMO5.0 and CLM4.5
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Published:2022-01-25
Issue:2
Volume:15
Page:553-594
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ISSN:1991-9603
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Container-title:Geoscientific Model Development
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geosci. Model Dev.
Author:
Pelletier CharlesORCID, Fichefet Thierry, Goosse HuguesORCID, Haubner KonstanzeORCID, Helsen SamuelORCID, Huot Pierre-Vincent, Kittel ChristophORCID, Klein François, Le clec'h SébastienORCID, van Lipzig Nicole P. M., Marchi SylvainORCID, Massonnet FrançoisORCID, Mathiot Pierre, Moravveji Ehsan, Moreno-Chamarro EduardoORCID, Ortega PabloORCID, Pattyn Frank, Souverijns NielsORCID, Van Achter GuillianORCID, Vanden Broucke Sam, Vanhulle Alexander, Verfaillie DeborahORCID, Zipf LarsORCID
Abstract
Abstract. We introduce PARASO, a novel five-component fully coupled regional climate model over an Antarctic circumpolar domain covering the full Southern Ocean.
The state-of-the-art models used are the fast Elementary Thermomechanical Ice Sheet model (f.ETISh) v1.7 (ice sheet), the Nucleus for European Modelling of the Ocean (NEMO) v3.6 (ocean), the Louvain-la-Neuve sea-ice model (LIM) v3.6 (sea ice), the COnsortium for Small-scale MOdeling (COSMO) model v5.0 (atmosphere) and its CLimate Mode (CLM) v4.5 (land),
which are here run at a horizontal resolution close to 1/4∘.
One key feature of this tool resides in a novel two-way coupling interface for representing ocean–ice-sheet interactions, through explicitly resolved ice-shelf cavities.
The impact of atmospheric processes on the Antarctic ice sheet is also conveyed through computed COSMO-CLM–f.ETISh surface mass exchange.
In this technical paper, we briefly introduce each model's configuration and document the developments that were carried out in order to establish PARASO.
The new offline-based NEMO–f.ETISh coupling interface is thoroughly described.
Our developments also include a new surface tiling approach to combine open-ocean and sea-ice-covered cells within COSMO, which was required to make this model relevant in the context of coupled simulations in polar regions.
We present results from a 2000–2001 coupled 2-year experiment.
PARASO is numerically stable and fully operational.
The 2-year simulation conducted without fine tuning of the model reproduced the main expected features, although remaining systematic biases provide perspectives for further adjustment and development.
Funder
Fonds De La Recherche Scientifique - FNRS
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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