4.6 Article

Historical evolution of global and regional surface air temperature simulated by FGOALS-s2 and FGOALS-g2: How reliable are the model results?

Journal

ADVANCES IN ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
Volume 30, Issue 3, Pages 638-657

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s00376-013-2205-1

Keywords

FGOALS; 20th century historical simulation; warming trends; global scale; hemispheric scale; regional scale

Funding

  1. National High Technology Research and Development Program of China [2010AA012304]
  2. National Program on Key Basic Research Project of China [2010CB951904]
  3. NSFC project [41125017]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In order to assess the performance of two versions of the IAP/LASG Flexible Global Ocean-Atmosphere-Land System (FGOALS) model, simulated changes in surface air temperature (SAT), from natural and anthropogenic forcings, were compared to observations for the period 1850-2005 at global, hemispheric, continental and regional scales. The global and hemispheric averages of SAT and their land and ocean components during 1850-2005 were well reproduced by FGOALS-g2, as evidenced by significant correlation coefficients and small RMSEs. The significant positive correlations were firstly determined by the warming trends, and secondly by interdecadal fluctuations. The abilities of the models to reproduce interdecadal SAT variations were demonstrated by both wavelet analysis and significant positive correlations for detrended data. The observed land-sea thermal contrast change was poorly simulated. The major weakness of FGOALS-s2 was an exaggerated warming response to anthropogenic forcing, with the simulation showing results that were far removed from observations prior to the 1950s. The observations featured warming trends (1906-2005) of 0.71, 0.68 and 0.79A degrees C (100 yr)(-1) for global, Northern and Southern Hemispheric averages, which were overestimated by FGOALS-s2 [1.42, 1.52 and 1.13A degrees C (100 yr)(-1)] but underestimated by FGOALS-g2 [0.69, 0.68 and 0.73A degrees C (100 yr)(-1)]. The polar amplification of the warming trend was exaggerated in FGOALSs2 but weakly reproduced in FGOALS-g2. The stronger response of FGOALS-s2 to anthropogenic forcing was caused by strong sea-ice albedo feedback and water vapor feedback. Examination of model results in 15 selected subcontinental-scale regions showed reasonable performance for FGOALS-g2 over most regions. However, the observed warming trends were overestimated by FGOALS-s2 in most regions. Over East Asia, the meridional gradient of the warming trend simulated by FGOALS-s2 (FGOALS-g2) was stronger (weaker) than observed.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available