4.6 Article

Validation of the nesting technique in a regional climate model and sensitivity tests to the resolution of the lateral boundary conditions during summer

Journal

CLIMATE DYNAMICS
Volume 25, Issue 6, Pages 555-580

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00382-005-0023-6

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The ability of a regional climate model (RCM) to successfully reproduce the fine-scale features of a regional climate during summer is evaluated using an approach nick-named the Big-Brother Experiment (BBE). The BBE establishes a reference virtual-reality climate with a RCM applied on a large and high-resolution domain: this simulation is called the Big-Brother (BB) simulation. This reference simulation is then downgraded by filtering small-scale features that are unresolved in today's global objective analyses. The resulting fields are then used as nesting data to drive the same RCM, which is integrated, at the same high resolution as the BB, only over a sub-area of the larger BB domain, hence, producing the Little-Brother simulation (LB). With the BBE approach, differences between the two simulated climates (BB and LB) can be unambiguously attributed to errors associated with the dynamical downscaling technique, and not to model errors or observational limitations. The current study focuses on the summer over the West Coast of North America. Results of the stationary and transient parts of the fields, decomposed by horizontal scales, are presented for the month of July, for 5 consecutive years (1990-1994). Three degrees of spatial filtering (roughly equivalent to the global spectral resolution of T30, T60 and T360) as well as two update intervals (3 and 6 h) of the lateral boundary conditions (LBC) have been employed. This study establishes that the maximum acceptable resolution of driving data for summer is T30, with improved results employing the T60 resolution of LBC. There is little improvement by reducing the time interval from 6 h to 3 h. These results are generally in agreement with previous studies carried out for winter. The good correlation between LB and BB simulations is more difficult to achieve during the summer season, mostly due to weaker control exerted by LBC. Poor correlations are more pronounced for the transient parts than they are for the stationary parts of the fields. This is especially true for the precipitation field, where differences can be attributed to higher temporal variability during the summer due to the presence of convection.

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