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5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub
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5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

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Page 1: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models

Katherine Straub

Page 2: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Zonal wavenumber-frequency power spectrum of tropical OLR

data, 1979-2001

This plot shows the spectral power in observed tropical OLR that exists above a smoothed red noise background spectrum.

The solid lines are dispersion curves for wave modes with equivalent depths of 8, 25, and 90 m, or Kelvin wave phase speeds of 9, 16, and 30 m s-1.

Based on Wheeler and Kiladis (1999), Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences

Kelvin

n=1 WIG

n=1 ER

MJO

Page 3: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Zonal wavenumber-frequency power spectrum of tropical

precipitation data, 1998-2007

This plot shows the spectral power in observed tropical precipitation (TRMM 3G68) that exists above a smoothed red noise background spectrum.

Kelvin waves are still present at the same range of shallow equivalent depths.

Kelvin

n=1 WIG

n=1 ER

MJO

Very similar to Cho et al. (2004), Journal of Climate

Page 4: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Do global models have Kelvin waves?

• Data: Output from 21 global models run for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP)– “Climate of the 20th Century” model runs

(1961-2000) are analyzed for Kelvin waves– Wavenumber-frequency power spectrum of

precipitation is calculated for each model• This study is similar to Lin et al. (2006), but with the

goal of studying Kelvin waves rather than intraseasonal variability

Page 5: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

21 models analyzed for Kelvin waves

Name Abbreviation

Model(s)

Bjerknes Center for Climate Research, Norway BCCR BCM2.0

Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis, Canada

CCCM CGCM3.1, T63CGCM3.1, T47

CCSR/NIES/FRCGC, Japan CCSR MIROC3.2, medium resolution

CSIRO Atmospheric Research, Australia CSIRO Mk3.0Mk3.5

INGV, National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology, Italy

INGV ECHAM4.6

Institute for Numerical Mathematics, Russia INM INMCM3.0

IPSL/LMD/LSCE, France IPSL CM4V1

LASG, Institute of Atmospheric Physics, China IAP FGOALS1.0_g

Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Germany MPI ECHAM5/MPI

Meteo-France, Centre National de Recherches Meteorologiques, France

CNRM CM3

Meteorological Institute of the University of Bonn, Germany

MIUB ECHO-G

Meteorological Research Institute, Japan MRI CGCM2.3.2a

NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, USA GISS AOM C4x3E20/HYCOME20/Russell

National Center for Atmospheric Research, USA NCAR CCSM3.0PCM1

NOAA Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, USA GFDL CM2.0CM2.1

Page 6: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Example: Model with strong KW variability

precipitation averaged 5S-5N

Straight lines represent equivalent depths of 8, 25, and 90 m, or KW

phase speeds of 9, 16, and 30 m s-1

Page 7: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Example: Model with no KW variability

Straight lines represent equivalent depths of 8, 25, and 90 m, or KW

phase speeds of 9, 16, and 30 m s-1 precipitation averaged 5S-5N

Page 8: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Rainfall Power Spectra, IPCC AR4 Intercomparison 15S-15N, (Symmetric)

from Lin et al., 2006

Observations

Page 9: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Rainfall Power Spectra, IPCC AR4 Intercomparison 15S-15N, (Symmetric)

from Lin et al., 2006

Page 10: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Rainfall Spectra/Backgr, IPCC AR4 Intercomparison 15S-15N, (Symmetric)

from Lin et al., 2006

Observations

Page 11: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

from Lin et al., 2006

Rainfall Spectra/Backgr, IPCC AR4 Intercomparison 15S-15N, (Symmetric)

Page 12: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Models with KW variability

• Of the 21 models analyzed, 8 have reasonable-looking KW spectra:– CCSR, Japan (MIROC)– GISS-AOM, USA– GISS-EH, USA– GISS-ER, USA– IPSL, France– MIUB, Germany (ECHO)– MPI, Germany (ECHAM5)– MRI, Japan

Page 13: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Models with KW variability

CCSR, Japan

GISS-AOM, USA

GISS-EH, USA

GISS-ER, USA

Page 14: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Models with KW variability

IPSL, France

MIUB, Germany

MPI, Germany

MRI, Japan

Page 15: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Models with little KW variability

BCCR, Norway

CCCM63, Canada

CCCM47, Canada

CNRM, France

Page 16: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Models with little KW variability

CSIRO3, Australia

CSIRO3.5, Australia

GFDL2, USA

GFDL2.1, USA

Page 17: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Models with little KW variability

IAP, China INGV, Italy

INM, Russia

NCAR-CCSM3, USA

Page 18: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Models with little KW variability

NCAR-PCM, USA

Page 19: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

What do model KWs look like?

• How do model KWs compare to observations?

• Does the existence of a “good” KW spectral signature ensure the existence of realistic-looking waves?

Page 20: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Filters used to isolate KWs in precipitation datasets

Faster filter used for 3 GISS, IPSL, MRI (equivalent depths

12-150 m)

Slower filter used for CCSR, MIUB, MPI (equivalent depths

4-60 m)

Page 21: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Models with realistic KW distributions (MJJAS)

OLR - observations

CCSR, Japan

MIUB, Germany

MPI, Germany

Page 22: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Models with less realistic KW distributions

OLR - observations

GISS-AOM, USA

GISS-EH, USA

GISS-ER, USA

Page 23: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Models with less realistic KW distributions

OLR - observations

IPSL, France

MRI, Japan

Page 24: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

KW structure analysis: Methodology

• Regress 40 years of daily 3-D model grids (1961-2000) onto KW filtered precipitation data at point of maximum variance during NH summer (MJJAS)

Page 25: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Precipitation scale and propagation speed: PAC

Observations Models

CCSR

12 m s-1

MPI

11 m s-1

MIUB

11 m s-1

14 m s-1

OLR

Page 26: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

MRI

21 m s-1

Precipitation scale and propagation speed: PAC

Observations

Models

GISS-AOM

20 m s-1

GISS-ER

14 m s-1

GISS-EH

22 m s-1

14 m s-1

OLR

Page 27: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Precipitation scale and propagation speed: PAC

Models

IPSL

18 m s-1

Observations

14 m s-1

OLR

Page 28: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

What do observed KWs look like?

• OLR centered to north of equator, along ITCZ• Dynamical signals centered on equator• Winds are primarily zonal• Convergence to east of low OLR• Westerlies in phase with low OLR

OLR (red: increased cloudiness); ECMWF 1000-hPa u, v (vectors), z (contours)

Page 29: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

What do model KWs look like?

CCSR

MIUB

MPI

Precipitation (shading); 1000-hPa u, v (vectors); SLP (contours)

Page 30: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

What do model KWs look like?

Precipitation (shading); 1000-hPa u, v (vectors); SLP (contours)

MRI

Page 31: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

What do model KWs look like?

GISS-AOM

Precipitation (shading); 1000-hPa u, v (vectors); SLP (contours)

GISS-EH

GISS-ER

Page 32: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Observed KWs: Upper troposphere

• Divergence collocated with/to the west of lowest OLR

• Zonal winds near equator• Rotational circulations off of equator

OLR (shading); ECMWF 200-hPa u, v (vectors), streamfunction (contours)

H L

H L

Page 33: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Model KWs: Upper troposphere

CCSR

MIUB

MPI

Precipitation (shading); 200-hPa u, v (vectors); streamfunction (contours)

H L

L

H L

LH

H L

H L

Page 34: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Model KWs: Upper troposphere

Precipitation (shading); 200-hPa u, v (vectors); streamfunction (contours)

MRI

L

L

H

Page 35: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Model KWs: Upper troposphere

Precipitation (shading); 200-hPa u, v (vectors); streamfunction (contours)

GISS-AOM

GISS-EH

GISS-ER

LH

L H

L

LHL

Page 36: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Observed KWs: Vertical structure, T

Wave Motion

Temperature at Majuro (radiosonde, 7N, 171E)

Page 37: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Model KWs: Vertical structure, T

CCSR

MIUB

MPI

Page 38: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Model KWs: Vertical structure, T

GISS-AOM

GISS-EH

GISS-ER MRI

Page 39: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Observed KWs: Vertical structure, q

Wave Motion

Specific humidity at Majuro (radiosonde, 7N, 171E)

Page 40: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Model KWs: Vertical structure, q

CCSR

MIUB

MPI

Page 41: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Model KWs: Vertical structure, q

GISS-AOM

GISS-EH

GISS-ER MRI

Page 42: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Conclusions

• Of 21 models analyzed, 3 reasonably simulate convectively coupled Kelvin waves– Common features:

• Slow phase speed• Maximum wave activity in Pacific ITCZ, equatorial Indian

Ocean• Realistic amplitude of SLP anomalies relative to

precipitation• Upper-level rotational signals in both hemispheres• Second vertical mode temperature structure• Significant cooling and drying following precipitation

• The existence of a reasonable-looking precipitation spectrum does not guarantee the existence of reasonable-looking Kelvin waves

Page 43: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Summary and Final comments

• KWs described by shallow water theory (Matsuno, 1966).

• KWs couple the dynamical circulations to regions of enhanced tropical cloudiness and rainfall.

• Convectively coupled KWs are ubiquitous in observational data of the tropical atmosphere:

• The western Pacific (Straub and Kiladis 2002)• The Atlantic ITCZ (Wang and Fu 2007)• Africa (Mounier et al. 2007; Mekonnen et al. 2008; Nguyen and

Duvel 2008)• The Indian Ocean (Roundy 2008)• South America (Liebmann et al. 2009)

Page 44: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Summary and Final comments• The coupled signal of a KW moves eastward at 10-20 m/s along the

ITCZ, with a zonal wavelength of 3000-6000 km.

• Wind are primarily zonal near the equator.

• Geopotential height and zonal wind are in phase at the surface.

• Surface convergence and increased low-level moisture lead the enhanced cloudiness and precipitation in the wave by 1/8 to ¼ wavelength.

• Upper-tropospheric divergence is in phase with high cloudiness and precipitation.

• The large-scale eastward-moving envelope of cloudiness typically consists to smaller-scale, westward-moving cloud clusters.

• The predominant mode of cloudiness in the wave tends to progress from shallow to deep convective to stratiform clouds.

Page 45: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Summary and Final comments

• Kiladis et al. (2009) suggest the possibility of a unified theory for convectively coupled equatorial waves (CCEWs) for their dynamics and coupling mechanism.

• GCMs typically found deficient in simulating CCEWs (Lin et al. 2006).

• Given KW has the strongest spectral peak, and the importance of CCEWs in explaining the observed variability of tropical rainfall, it is of interest to fully understand and explore their representation in GCMs.

Page 46: 5.3. Kelvin wave in General Circulation Models Katherine Straub.

Summary and Final comments

• From 21 GCMs, less than half contain and spectral peak in precipitation in the KW band.

• From these with spectral peak, only 3 reasonably simulate the geographical distribution and 3D structure of the waves.

• The most commonality among these 3 models is the convective parameterization:

• Tiedtke (1989) modified by Nordeng (1994) in MPI and MIUB• Pan and Randall (1998) in CCSR

• Suggest that a model parameterization plays a crucial role in its ability to organize tropical convection into wave-like disturbances.