Milly, P. C. D., 1992: Potential evaporation and soil moisture in
general circulation models. Journal of Climate, 5(3),
209-226.
Abstract: The parameterization of continental evaporation in many
atmospheric general circulation models (GCMs) used for simulation of climate
is demonstrably inconsistent with the empirical work upon which the parameterization
is based. In the turbulent transfer relation for potential evaporation,
the climate models employ the modeled actual temperature to evaluate the
saturated surface humidity, whereas the consistent temperature is the one
reflecting cooling by the hypothetical potential evaporation. A simple
theoretical analysis and some direct computations, all ignoring atmospheric
feedbacks, indicate that whenever the soil moisture is limited, GCM-based
climate models produce rates of potential evaporation that exceed, by a
factor of two or more, the rates that would be yielded by use of the consistent
temperature. Further approximate analyses and supporting numerical simulations
indicate that the expected value of dry-season soil moisture has a short
memory relative to the annual cycle and that dry-season evaporation is
therefore nearly equal to dry-season precipitation. When potential evaporation
is overestimated, it follows that the soil moisture is artificially reduced
by a similar factor, and actual evaporation may or may not be overestimated,
depending on other details of the hydrologic parameterization. These arguments,
advanced on theoretical grounds, explain the substantial, systematic differences
between GCM-generated and observation-based estimates of potential evaporation
in the assessment of the effects of climatic change on continental hydrology
and water resources. They also provide a partial explanation of the excessively
low values of summer soil moisture in GCMs and raise questions concerning
the results of studies of soil-moisture changes induced by an increase
of greenhouse gases. Nevertheless, an approximate state was qualitatively
preserved in those studies.