Gordon, C. T., 1992: Comparison of 30-day integrations with and without
cloud-radiation interaction. Monthly Weather Review, 120(7),
1244-1277.
Abstract: A parameterization package for cloud-radiation interaction
is incorporated into a spectral general circulation model (GCM). Fractional
cloud amount is predicted quasi-empirically; cloud optical depth is specified
for warm clouds and anvil cirrus, but depends on temperature for other
subfreezing clouds; the long-and shortwave thermal, and dynamical response
to cloud-radiation interaction are investigated for the extended forecast
range, primarily by performing two sets of 30-day integrations from real
initial conditions for three Northern Hemisphere (NH) winter and three
NH summer cases: (i) CLDRADI, with cloud-radiation interaction; and (ii)
LONDON, with this GCM's traditional specification of climatological zonal-mean
cloud amount and global-mean cloud optical properties.
The 30-day mean CLDRADI fields of total and high cloud amount and corresponding
outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) fields are plausible in many respects,
especially in the tropics, where the latter exhibit South Pacific convergence
zone (SPCZ)-like and some intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ)-like features,
in qualitative agreement with Nimbus-7 and Earth Radiation Budget Experiment
(ERBE) observations. Also, the predicted monthly mean OLR anomalies (relative
to model climatology) respond to interannual variations in sea surface
temperature. Cloud amount and cloud optical depth are apparently underestimated,
however, over the higher-latitude oceans, especially over the Southern
Hemisphere (SH) circumpolar low pressure belt and Antarctica. The zonal
mean bias in shortwave and net radiation remains large at high latitudes
in the summer hemisphere, despite the improved longitudinal structure in
the tropics.
Cloud-radiation interaction elicits a cirrus warming response, which reduces
the tropical upper-tropospheric cold bias by ~1-2 K. Over Antarctica, the
warm bias in SH summer and cold bias in SH winter are both considerably
reduced. During NH winter, the tropical upper troposphere experiences a
significant westerly acceleration, including a sign reversal of the zonal-mean
zonal wind. By being more conducive to meridional propagation, CLDRADI's
tropical westerlies may contribute to the amplification of the quasi-stationary
planetary waves in the SH summer extratropics. Otherwise, the impact of
cloud-radiation interaction on extratropical geopotential height is generally
minimal at extended range.