Broccoli, A. J., and S. Manabe, 1990: Can existing climate models
be used to study anthropogenic changes in tropical cyclone climate?
Geophysical Research Letters, 17(11), 1917-1920.
Abstract: The utility of current generation climate models for studying
the influence of greenhouse warming on the tropical storm climatology is
examined. A method developed to identify tropical cyclones is applied to
a series of model integrations. The global distribution of tropical storms
is simulated by these models in a generally realistic manner. While the
model resolution is insufficient to reproduce the fine structure of tropical
cyclones, the simulated storms become more realistic as resolution is increased.
To obtain a preliminary estimate of the response of the tropical cyclone
climatology, CO2 was doubled using models
with varying cloud treatments and different horizontal resolutions. In
the experiment with prescribed cloudiness, the number of storm-days, a
combined measure of the number and duration of tropical storms, undergoes
a statistically significant increase in the doubled-CO2
climate. In contrast, a smaller but significant reduction of the number
of storm-days is indicated in the experiment with cloud feedback. In both
cases the response is independent of horizontal resolution. While the inconclusive
nature of these experimental results highlights the uncertainties that
remain in examining the details of greenhouse-gas induced climate change,
the ability of the models to qualitatively simulate the tropical storm
climatology suggests that they are appropriate tools for this problem.