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contributor authorKrinner, Gerhard
contributor authorGuicherd, Bérangère
contributor authorOx, Katia
contributor authorGenthon, Christophe
contributor authorMagand, Olivier
date accessioned2017-06-09T16:19:20Z
date available2017-06-09T16:19:20Z
date copyright2008/03/01
date issued2008
identifier issn0894-8755
identifier otherams-65717.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4206973
description abstractThis article reports on high-resolution (60 km) atmospheric general circulation model simulations of the Antarctic climate for the periods 1981?2000 and 2081?2100. The analysis focuses on the surface mass balance change, one of the components of the total ice sheet mass balance, and its impact on global eustatic sea level. Contrary to previous simulations, in which the authors directly used sea surface boundary conditions produced by a coupled ocean?atmosphere model for the last decades of both centuries, an anomaly method was applied here in which the present-day simulations use observed sea surface conditions, while the simulations for the end of the twenty-first century use the change in sea surface conditions taken from the coupled simulations superimposed on the present-day observations. It is shown that the use of observed oceanic boundary conditions clearly improves the simulation of the present-day Antarctic climate, compared to model runs using boundary conditions from a coupled climate model. Moreover, although the spatial patterns of the simulated climate change are similar, the two methods yield significantly different estimates of the amplitude of the future climate and surface mass balance change over the Antarctic continent. These differences are of similar magnitude as the intermodel dispersion in the current Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) exercise: selecting a method for generating boundary conditions for a high-resolution model may be just as important as selecting the climate model itself. Using the anomaly method, the simulated mean surface mass balance change over the grounded ice sheet from 1981?2000 to 2081?2100 is 43-mm water equivalent per year, corresponding to a eustatic sea level decrease of 1.5 mm yr?1. A further result of this work is that future continental-mean surface mass balance changes are dominated by the coastal regions, and that high-resolution models, which better resolve coastal processes, tend to predict stronger precipitation changes than models with lower spatial resolution.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleInfluence of Oceanic Boundary Conditions in Simulations of Antarctic Climate and Surface Mass Balance Change during the Coming Century
typeJournal Paper
journal volume21
journal issue5
journal titleJournal of Climate
identifier doi10.1175/2007JCLI1690.1
journal fristpage938
journal lastpage962
treeJournal of Climate:;2008:;volume( 021 ):;issue: 005
contenttypeFulltext


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