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    Coupled Model Simulations of the West African Monsoon System: Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Simulations

    Source: Journal of Climate:;2006:;volume( 019 ):;issue: 015::page 3681
    Author:
    Cook, Kerry H.
    ,
    Vizy, Edward K.
    DOI: 10.1175/JCLI3814.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: The ability of coupled GCMs to correctly simulate the climatology and a prominent mode of variability of the West African monsoon is evaluated, and the results are used to make informed decisions about which models may be producing more reliable projections of future climate in this region. The integrations were made available by the Program for Climate Model Diagnosis and Intercomparison for the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The evaluation emphasizes the circulation characteristics that support the precipitation climatology, and the physical processes of a ?rainfall dipole? variability mode that is often associated with dry conditions in the Sahel when SSTs in the Gulf of Guinea are anomalously warm. Based on the quality of their twentieth-century simulations over West Africa in summer, three GCMs are chosen for analysis of the twenty-first century integrations under various assumptions about future greenhouse gas increases. Each of these models behaves differently in the twenty-first-century simulations. One model simulates severe drying across the Sahel in the later part of the twenty-first century, while another projects quite wet conditions throughout the twenty-first century. In the third model, warming in the Gulf of Guinea leads to more modest drying in the Sahel due to a doubling of the number of anomalously dry years by the end of the century. An evaluation of the physical processes that cause these climate changes, in the context of the understanding about how the system works in the twentieth century, suggests that the third model provides the most reasonable projection of the twenty-first-century climate.
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      Coupled Model Simulations of the West African Monsoon System: Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Simulations

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    contributor authorCook, Kerry H.
    contributor authorVizy, Edward K.
    date accessioned2017-06-09T17:02:06Z
    date available2017-06-09T17:02:06Z
    date copyright2006/08/01
    date issued2006
    identifier issn0894-8755
    identifier otherams-78281.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4220932
    description abstractThe ability of coupled GCMs to correctly simulate the climatology and a prominent mode of variability of the West African monsoon is evaluated, and the results are used to make informed decisions about which models may be producing more reliable projections of future climate in this region. The integrations were made available by the Program for Climate Model Diagnosis and Intercomparison for the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The evaluation emphasizes the circulation characteristics that support the precipitation climatology, and the physical processes of a ?rainfall dipole? variability mode that is often associated with dry conditions in the Sahel when SSTs in the Gulf of Guinea are anomalously warm. Based on the quality of their twentieth-century simulations over West Africa in summer, three GCMs are chosen for analysis of the twenty-first century integrations under various assumptions about future greenhouse gas increases. Each of these models behaves differently in the twenty-first-century simulations. One model simulates severe drying across the Sahel in the later part of the twenty-first century, while another projects quite wet conditions throughout the twenty-first century. In the third model, warming in the Gulf of Guinea leads to more modest drying in the Sahel due to a doubling of the number of anomalously dry years by the end of the century. An evaluation of the physical processes that cause these climate changes, in the context of the understanding about how the system works in the twentieth century, suggests that the third model provides the most reasonable projection of the twenty-first-century climate.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleCoupled Model Simulations of the West African Monsoon System: Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Simulations
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume19
    journal issue15
    journal titleJournal of Climate
    identifier doi10.1175/JCLI3814.1
    journal fristpage3681
    journal lastpage3703
    treeJournal of Climate:;2006:;volume( 019 ):;issue: 015
    contenttypeFulltext
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