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Title: A study of intraseasonal variability in a one-dimensional version of the Goddard atmospheric global climate model. Ph.D. Thesis

Thesis/Dissertation ·
OSTI ID:237283

A series of numerical experiments using the Goddard Laboratory for Atmospheres Global Climate Model (GLA-AGCM) are designed to study intraseasonal variabilities of the Madden-Julian (1972) type for an idealized tropical oceanic-atmospheric environment. A commentary on the GLA-AGCM parameterizations is presented as a means to justify the adaptation of the full three dimensional AGCM to a simpler model of a dynamically isolated vertical column. The remaining portions of the model include physical parameterizations for cumulus convection, turbulent fluxes at the planetary boundary layer and short and longwave radiative interactions. The set of model experiments use prescribed values for the sea surface temperature and the upper air wind profile, over an assumed warm and uncoupled tropical ocean. The predominant time scales and the structure of the most noticeable fluctuations are dependent on the vertically integrated water vapor mass. Under low surface evaporation, a convective fast time scale of about 42 hours dominates the lower half of the troposphere and the transport of moisture to the upper layers. This convective regime tends to be warmer and moist all throughout, with a longer residence time. As the upper layers moisten, the absorption of shortwave radiation by water vapor aloft, and a reduced cooling due to longwave radiation emission, induce an overturning of the layers at the top of the troposphere, and a sudden transition to a colder and drier climate regime. The entire column is convectively active for a sustained period of time. For larger amounts of precipitable water the system fluctuates nonperiodically between two similarly defined regimes, but in time scales of about 20 to 60 days. In this case the drier regime has a longer residence time. A comparison of experiments with and without diurnal and seasonal solar cycles reveals that the predominant fluctuations and transitions occur even in the absence of the cyclic solar forcing.

Research Organization:
City Univ. of New York, NY (United States)
OSTI ID:
237283
Report Number(s):
N-96-22247; NIPS-96-08044; TRN: 9622247
Resource Relation:
Other Information: TH: Ph.D. Thesis; PBD: Jan 1994
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English