How Can We Improve the Seamless Representation of Climatological
Statistics and Weather Toward Reliable Global K-scale Climate
Simulations?
Abstract
Toward the achievement of reliable global kilometer-scale (k-scale)
climate simulations, we improve the Nonhydrostatic ICosaherdral
Atmospheric Model (NICAM) by focusing on moist physical processes. A
goal of the model improvement is to establish a configuration that can
simulate realistic fields seamlessly from the daily-scale variability to
the climatological statistics. Referring to the two representative
configurations of the present NICAM, of which each has been used for
climate-scale and sub-seasonal-scale experiments, we try to find the
appropriate partitioning of fast/local and slow/global-scale
circulations. In a series of sensitivity experiments at 14-km horizontal
mesh, (1) the tuning of terminal velocities of rain, snow, and cloud
ice, (2) the implementation of turbulent diffusion by the Leonard term,
and (3) enhanced vertical resolution are tested. These tests yield
reasonable convection triggering and convection-induced tropospheric
moistening, and result in better performance than in previous NICAM
climate simulations. In the mean state, double Intertropical Convergence
Zone bias disappears, and the zonal contrast of equatorial
precipitation, top-of-atmosphere radiation balance, vertical temperature
profile, and position/strength of subtropical jet are dramatically
better reproduced. Variability such as equatorial waves and the
Madden–Julian oscillation (MJO) is spontaneously realized with
appropriate spectral power balance, and the Asian summer monsoon,
boreal-summer MJO, and tropical cyclone (TC) activities are more
realistically simulated especially around the western Pacific.
Meanwhile, biases still exist in the representation of low-cloud
fraction, TC intensity, and precipitation diurnal cycle, suggesting that
both finer spatial resolutions and the further model development are
warranted.