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  • Articles  (2)
  • AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION  (2)
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
  • American Geophysical Union, AGU
  • American Meteorological Society
  • EGU General Assembly 2016
  • 2020-2022  (2)
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  • Articles  (2)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-10-05
    Description: The Alfred Wegener Institute Climate Model (AWI‐CM) participates for the first time in the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP), CMIP6. The sea ice‐ocean component, FESOM, runs on an unstructured mesh with horizontal resolutions ranging from 8 to 80 km. FESOM is coupled to the Max Planck Institute atmospheric model ECHAM 6.3 at a horizontal resolution of about 100 km. Using objective performance indices, it is shown that AWI‐CM performs better than the average of CMIP5 models. AWI‐CM shows an equilibrium climate sensitivity of 3.2°C, which is similar to the CMIP5 average, and a transient climate response of 2.1°C which is slightly higher than the CMIP5 average. The negative trend of Arctic sea‐ice extent in September over the past 30 years is 20–30% weaker in our simulations compared to observations. With the strongest emission scenario, the AMOC decreases by 25% until the end of the century which is less than the CMIP5 average of 40%. Patterns and even magnitude of simulated temperature and precipitation changes at the end of this century compared to present‐day climate under the strong emission scenario SSP585 are similar to the multi‐model CMIP5 mean. The simulations show a 11°C warming north of the Barents Sea and around 2°C to 3°C over most parts of the ocean as well as a wetting of the Arctic, subpolar, tropical, and Southern Ocean. Furthermore, in the northern middle latitudes in boreal summer and autumn as well as in the southern middle latitudes, a more zonal atmospheric flow is projected throughout the year.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-11-01
    Description: Observations in polar regions show that sea ice deformations are often narrow linear features. These long bands of deformations are referred to as Linear Kinematic Features (LKFs). Viscous- plastic sea ice models have the capability to simulate LKFs and more generally sea ice deformations. Moreover, viscous-plastic models simulate a larger number and more refined LKFs as the spatial resolution is increased. Besides grid spacing, other aspects of a numerical implementation, such as the placement of velocities and the associated degrees of freedom, may impact the formation of simulated LKFs. To explore these effects this study compares numerical solutions of sea ice models with different velocity staggering in a benchmark problem. Discretizations based on A-,B-, and C-grid systems on quadrilateral meshes have similar resolution properties as an approximation with an A-grid staggering on triangular grids (with the same total number of vertices). CD-grid approximations with a given grid spacing have properties, specifically the number and length of simulated LKFs, that are qualitatively similar to approximations on conventional Arakawa A-grid, B-grid, and C-grid approaches with half the grid spacing or less, making the CD-discretization more efficient with respect to grid resolution. One reason for this behavior is the fact that the CD-grid approach has a higher number of degrees of freedom to discretize the velocity field. The higher effective resolution of the CD-discretization makes it an attractive alternative to conventional discretizations.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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