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CAWCR Technical Report
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Extending atmospheric CO2 and tracer capabilities in ACCESS
Corbin Katherine D.; Law Rachel M. - Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research, 2011 (CAWCR Technical Report-No. 035)The Australian Community Climate and Earth System Simulator (ACCESS) is a coupled landocean-atmosphere model being developed for a wide variety of applications. One key area of research with ACCESS is the carbon cycle, in particular atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) concentrations resulting from prescribed surface fluxes. ACCESS derives its atmospheric model from the UK Met Office Unified model (UM), which included both a specific atmospheric CO2 tracer (used for climate-carbon feedback studies) as well as other generic atmospheric tracers, developed for stratospheric transpor ...
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Available online: https://www.cawcr.gov.au/publications/
Published by: Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research ; 2011
The Australian Community Climate and Earth System Simulator (ACCESS) is a coupled landocean-atmosphere model being developed for a wide variety of applications. One key area of research with ACCESS is the carbon cycle, in particular atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) concentrations resulting from prescribed surface fluxes. ACCESS derives its atmospheric model from the UK Met Office Unified model (UM), which included both a specific atmospheric CO2 tracer (used for climate-carbon feedback studies) as well as other generic atmospheric tracers, developed for stratospheric transport studies. For our applications, the CO2 and generic tracers within the UM required several modifications. The use of the CO2 tracer was made more flexible, with less assumed coupling with other model components (e.g. radiation). For atmospheric tracers, associated surface fluxes were added for the first twenty tracers, and a methodology to more easily initialize the tracers was implemented. To participate in a model intercomparison, new routines were added to simulate the atmospheric loss of CH4 and methyl chloroform (MCF) without explicitly modelling chemistry, as well as radioactive decay of radon. Investigations of the tracers revealed that the atmospheric mass was not being conserved, and a simple mass mixing ratio fixer has been developed to ensure tracer conservation, taking into account any global mixing ratio change resulting from surface fluxes. The new capabilities in ACCESS are used to investigate the model transport using atmospheric CO2 concentrations, indicating that the inter-hemispheric mixing may be too slow and that the night-time and winter stable boundary layers apparently mix too slowly, particularly using the “sharpest” stable boundary layer parameterization. Analysis of resulting CH4 concentrations for the model inter-comparison, revealed a problem with the transport in the top level of the model, which impacted the atmospheric concentrations throughout the atmosphere. Case studies using various model set-ups indicated that a simple fix is to set the top level equal to the neighbouring lower level; however, further investigation into the mixing at the top of the atmosphere should be conducted to fully diagnose the problem.
Collection(s) and Series: CAWCR Technical Report- No. 035
Language(s): English
Format: Digital (Free), Hard copy (ill., charts, maps)Tags: Observations ; Carbon dioxide (CO2) ; Atmosphere ; Greenhouse gas (GHG) ; Measure
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Climate Science update : a report to the 2011 Garnaut review
Keenan T.D.; Cleugh H.A. - Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research, 2010 (CAWCR Technical Report-No. 036)This technical report is based on scientific contributions from both CSIRO1 and the Bureau of Meteorology. It is not intended to be comprehensive in terms of depth or breadth. Rather it is a snapshot of the “state of the science” mainly from the perspective of CAWCR scientific expertise based on peer-reviewed literature. The issues covered relate mainly (but not exclusively) to the scope of Working Group One (WGI) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (http://www.ipcc.ch/); i.e. an assessment of the physical and scientific aspects of the climate system and climate change. We are pa ...
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Available online: http://www.garnautreview.org.au/update-2011/garnaut-review-2011.html
Published by: Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research ; 2010
This technical report is based on scientific contributions from both CSIRO1 and the Bureau of Meteorology. It is not intended to be comprehensive in terms of depth or breadth. Rather it is a snapshot of the “state of the science” mainly from the perspective of CAWCR scientific expertise based on peer-reviewed literature. The issues covered relate mainly (but not exclusively) to the scope of Working Group One (WGI) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (http://www.ipcc.ch/); i.e. an assessment of the physical and scientific aspects of the climate system and climate change. We are particularly grateful to these contributors for undertaking this significant effort within a very tight timeline.
Collection(s) and Series: CAWCR Technical Report- No. 036
Language(s): English
Format: Digital (Free), Hard copy (ill., charts, maps)Tags: Climate ; Climate change ; Australia
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Approaches for generating climate change scenarios for use in drought projections : a review
Kirono G.C.; Hennessy Kevin; Mpelasoka Freddie; et al. - Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research, 2010 (CAWCR Technical Report-No. 034)This report describes approaches used for constructing climate projections from a set of climate model simulations for use in drought projections, particularly in Australia. The description includes the pros and cons of each approach with respect to the calculation process, data that are produced, and discussion of the main sources of uncertainty. Although the main focus is on research and approaches that are applied in Australia, the report also briefly discusses approaches applied elsewhere in the world.
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Available online: http://www.cawcr.gov.au/technical-reports/CTR_034.pdf
G.C. Kirono ; Kevin Hennessy ; Freddie Mpelasoka ; David Kent
Published by: Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research ; 2010This report describes approaches used for constructing climate projections from a set of climate model simulations for use in drought projections, particularly in Australia. The description includes the pros and cons of each approach with respect to the calculation process, data that are produced, and discussion of the main sources of uncertainty. Although the main focus is on research and approaches that are applied in Australia, the report also briefly discusses approaches applied elsewhere in the world.
Collection(s) and Series: CAWCR Technical Report- No. 034
Language(s): English
Format: Digital (Free), Hard copy (ill., charts, maps)ISBN (or other code): 978-1-921826-14-6
Tags: Climate ; Climate change ; Climate prediction ; Drought ; Australia
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