Title
Evaluation of FESOM2.0 Coupled to ECHAM6.3: Preindustrial and HighResMIP Simulations
Date Issued
01 November 2019
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Sidorenko D.
Goessling H.F.
Koldunov N.V.
Scholz P.
Danilov S.
Barbi D.
Gurses O.
Harig S.
Hinrichs C.
Juricke S.
Lohmann G.
Losch M.
Mu L.
Rackow T.
Rakowsky N.
Sein D.
Semmler T.
Shi X.
Stepanek C.
Streffing J.
Wang Q.
Wekerle C.
Yang H.
Jung T.
University of Alcala
Publisher(s)
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
A new global climate model setup using FESOM2.0 for the sea ice-ocean component and ECHAM6.3 for the atmosphere and land surface has been developed. Replacing FESOM1.4 by FESOM2.0 promises a higher efficiency of the new climate setup compared to its predecessor. The new setup allows for long-term climate integrations using a locally eddy-resolving ocean. Here it is evaluated in terms of (1) the mean state and long-term drift under preindustrial climate conditions, (2) the fidelity in simulating the historical warming, and (3) differences between coarse and eddy-resolving ocean configurations. The results show that the realism of the new climate setup is overall within the range of existing models. In terms of oceanic temperatures, the historical warming signal is of smaller amplitude than the model drift in case of a relatively short spin-up. However, it is argued that the strategy of “de-drifting” climate runs after the short spin-up, proposed by the HighResMIP protocol, allows one to isolate the warming signal. Moreover, the eddy-permitting/resolving ocean setup shows notable improvements regarding the simulation of oceanic surface temperatures, in particular in the Southern Ocean.
Start page
3794
End page
3815
Volume
11
Issue
11
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Meteorología y ciencias atmosféricas Investigación climática
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85075714873
Source
Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems
ISSN of the container
19422466
Sponsor(s)
We thank two anonymous reviewers for their comments which helped to considerably improve the manuscript. The work was supported by the Helmholtz Climate Initiative REKLIM (Regional Climate Change) (Q. Wang and D. Sidorenko), the APPLICATE (Advanced Prediction in Polar regions and beyond: modelling, observing system design and LInkages associated with a Changing Arctic climaTE, grant H2020-BG-2016-1) (T. Jung), the FRAM (FRontiers in Arctic marine Monitoring program) (C. Wekerle), contribution to the projects M3 and S2 of the Collaborative Research Centre TRR 181 “Energy Transfer in Atmosphere and Ocean” funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under project 274762653 (S. Danilov, N. Koldunov, and S. Juricke), the EC Horizon 2020 project PRIMAVERA under the grant agreement 641727, the state assignment of FASO Russia theme 0149-2019-0015 (D. Sein), and the BMBF project SSIP (grant 01LN1701A; H. Goessling). The simulations were performed at the North-German Supercomputing Alliance (HLRN).
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus