[Seminar on 15 Oct.] Spectral radiative kernel and the spectral dimension of long wave feedbacks in the CMIP3 and CMIP5 experiments
Date:2014-10-14
Xianglei Huang,University of Michigan
10:00-11:00, 15 Oct. 2014
No. 912, Building 40, IAP
Abstract:
Radiative feedback is normally discussed in terms of the change of broadband flux. Yet it has an intrinsic dimension of spectrum. A set of all-sky and clear-sky long wave (LW) spectral radiative kernels (SRK) are constructed using a recently developed spectral flux simulator which is based on the PCRTM (Principal-Component-based Radiative Transfer Model). The LW spectral radiative kernels are validated against the benchmark partial radiative perturbation method. The LW broadband feedbacks derived using this SRK method are consistent with the published results using the broadband radiative kernels. The SRK is then applied to 12 GCMs in CMIP3 archives and 12 GCMs in CMIP5 archives to derive the spectrally resolved Planck, lapse rate, and LW water vapor feedbacks. The inter-model spreads of the spectral lapse-rate feedbacks among the CMIP3 models are noticeably different than those among the CMIP5 models. In contrast, the inter-model spread of spectral LW water vapor feedbacks changes little from the CMIP3 to CMIP5 simulations, when the specific humidity is used as the state variable. Spatially the far-IR band is more responsible for the changes in lapse-rate feedbacks from the CMIP3 to CMIP5 than the window band. When relative humidity (RH) is used as state variable, virtually all GCMs have little broadband RH feedbacks as shown in Held & Shell (2012). However, the RH feedbacks can be significantly non-zero over different LW spectral regions and the spectral details of such RH feedbacks vary significantly from one GCM to the other. Finally an interpretation based on a one-layer atmospheric model is presented to illustrate under what statistical circumstances the linear technique can be applied to spectral flux heavily averaged over the spatial and temporal dimensions in spite of the fact that the radiative transfer of each individual case is highly nonlinear.
Speaker's bio
Dr. Xianglei Huang is currently associate professor in the department of Atmospheric, Oceanic, and Space Science in the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. He obtained his B.S. in Atmospheric Physics from USTC in 1997 and Ph.D. in Planetary Sciences from Caltech in2004. He is specialized in the infrared radiative transfer, satellite remote sensing, and diagnosis analysis of satellite observations and climate model simulations. He also serves as associate editor for Journal of Climate and Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology, both published by American Meteorological Society.