The influence of atmospheric grid resolution in a climate model-forced ice sheet simulation
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Published:2018-04-23
Issue:4
Volume:12
Page:1499-1510
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Lofverstrom MarcusORCID, Liakka Johan
Abstract
Abstract. Coupled climate–ice sheet
simulations have been growing in popularity in recent years. Experiments of
this type are however challenging as ice sheets evolve over multi-millennial
timescales, which is beyond the practical integration limit of most
Earth system models. A common method to increase model throughput is to trade
resolution for computational efficiency (compromise accuracy for speed).
Here we analyze how the resolution of an atmospheric general circulation
model (AGCM) influences the simulation quality in a stand-alone ice sheet
model. Four identical AGCM simulations of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) were
run at different horizontal resolutions: T85 (1.4∘), T42
(2.8∘), T31 (3.8∘), and T21 (5.6∘). These simulations
were subsequently used as forcing of an ice sheet model. While the T85
climate forcing reproduces the LGM ice sheets to a high accuracy, the
intermediate resolution cases (T42 and T31) fail to build the Eurasian ice
sheet. The T21 case fails in both Eurasia and North America. Sensitivity
experiments using different surface mass balance parameterizations improve
the simulations of the Eurasian ice sheet in the T42 case, but the compromise
is a substantial ice buildup in Siberia. The T31 and T21 cases do not
improve in the same way in Eurasia, though the latter simulates the
continent-wide Laurentide ice sheet in North America. The difficulty to
reproduce the LGM ice sheets in the T21 case is in broad agreement with
previous studies using low-resolution atmospheric models, and is caused by a
substantial deterioration of the model climate between the T31 and T21
resolutions. It is speculated that this deficiency may demonstrate a
fundamental problem with using low-resolution atmospheric models in these types of
experiments.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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