Donner, L. J., C.
J. Seman, B. J. Soden, R.
S. Hemler, J. C. Warren, J. Ström, and K-N. Liou, 1997: Large-scale
ice clouds in the GFDL SKYHI general circulation model. Journal
of Geophysical Research, 102(D18), 21,745-21,768.
Abstract: Ice clouds associated with large-scale atmospheric processes
are studied using the SKYHI general circulation model (GCM) and parameterizations
for their microphysical and radiative properties. The ice source is deposition
from vapor, and the ice sinks are gravitational settling and sublimation.
Effective particle sizes for ice distributions are related empirically
to temperature. Radiative properties are evaluated as functions of ice
path and effective size using approximations to detailed radiative-transfer
solutions (Mie theory and geometric ray tracing). The distributions of
atmospheric ice and their impact on climate and climate sensitivity are
evaluated by integrating the SKYHI GCM (developed at the Geophysical Fluid
Dynamics Laboratory) for six model months. Most of the major climatological
cirrus regions revealed by satellite observations appear in the GCM. The
radiative forcing associated with ice clouds acts to warm the Earth-atmosphere
system. Relative to a SKYHI integration without these clouds, zonally averaged
temperatures are warmer in the upper tropical troposphere with ice clouds.
The presence of ice produced small net changes in the sensitivity of SKYHI
climate to radiative perturbations, but this represents an intricate balance
among changes in clear-, cloud-, solar-, and longwave-sensitivity components.
Deficiencies in the representation of ice clouds are identified as results
of biases in the large-scale GCM fields which drive the parameterization
and neglect of subgrid variations in these fields, as well as parameterization
simplifications of complex microphysical and radiative processes.