4.7 Article

Effects of forcing differences and initial conditions on inter-model agreement in the VolMIP volc-pinatubo-full experiment

Journal

GEOSCIENTIFIC MODEL DEVELOPMENT
Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages 2265-2292

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/gmd-15-2265-2022

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Research Unit VolImpact within the project VolClim [FOR2820, 398006378]
  2. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) within the research programme ROMIC-II, ISOVIC [FKZ: 01LG1909B]
  3. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) of Japan [JPMXD0717935715]
  4. French CNRS [CRSII5_183571 -CALDERA]
  5. NASA Modeling, Analysis and Prediction programme
  6. US National Science Foundation [AGS-2017113]
  7. joint UK BEIS/DEFRA-Met Office Hadley Centre Climate Programme [GA01101]
  8. UK National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS), via the ACSIS long-term science programme on the North Atlantic climate system [NE/N018001/1]
  9. NCAS single-centre Long-term Science programme within the Climate and High Impact Weather theme [NE/R015244/1]
  10. REU (Research Experiences for Undergraduates) grant, 2019 Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory summer REU programme [OCE 17-57602]

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This paper presents initial results from a multi-model ensemble analysis of the climatic response to volcanic forcing. The analysis shows overall good agreement between different models on the global and hemispheric scales, indicating the effectiveness of the experimental design.
This paper provides initial results from a multi-model ensemble analysis based on the volc-pinatubo-full experiment performed within the Model Intercomparison Project on the climatic response to Volcanic forcing (VolMIP) as part of the sixth phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6). The volc-pinatubo-full experiment is based on an ensemble of volcanic forcing-only climate simulations with the same volcanic aerosol dataset across the participating models (the 1991-1993 Pinatubo period from the CMIP6-GloSSAC dataset). The simulations are conducted within an idealized experimental design where initial states are sampled consistently across models from the CMIP6-piControl simulation providing unperturbed preindustrial background conditions. The multi-model ensemble includes output from an initial set of six participating Earth system models (CanESM5, GISS-E2.1-G, IPSL-CM6A-LR, MIROC-E2SL, MPI-ESM1.2-LR and UKESM1). The results show overall good agreement between the different models on the global and hemispheric scales concerning the surface climate responses, thus demonstrating the overall effectiveness of VolMIP's experimental design. However, small yet significant inter-model discrepancies are found in radiative fluxes, especially in the tropics, that preliminary analyses link with minor differences in forcing implementation; model physics, notably aerosol-radiation interactions; the simulation and sampling of El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO); and, possibly, the simulation of climate feedbacks operating in the tropics. We discuss the volc-pinatubo-full protocol and highlight the advantages of volcanic forcing experiments defined within a carefully designed protocol with respect to emerging modelling approaches based on large ensemble transient simulations. We identify how the VolMIP strategy could be improved in future phases of the initiative to ensure a cleaner sampling protocol with greater focus on the evolving state of ENSO in the pre-eruption period.

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