Perturbing Parameters to Understand Cloud Contributions to Climate Change

Margaret L. Duffy, Brian Medeiros, Andrew Gettelman, Trude Eidhammer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

The sensitivity of cloud feedbacks to atmospheric model parameters is evaluated using a CAM6 perturbed parameter ensemble (PPE). The CAM6 PPE perturbs 45 parameters across 262 simulations, 206 of which are used here. The spread in the total cloud feedback and its six components across the CAM6 PPE are comparable to the spread across the CMIP6 and AMIP ensembles, indicating that parametric uncertainty mirrors structural uncertainty. However, the high-cloud altitude feedback is generally larger in the CAM6 PPE than WCRP assessment, CMIP6, and AMIP values. We evaluate the influence of each of the 45 parameters on the total cloud feedback and each of the six cloud feedback components. We also explore whether the CAM6 PPE can be used to constrain the total cloud feedback, with inconclusive results. Further, we find that despite the large parametric sensitivity of cloud feedbacks in CAM6, a substantial increase in cloud feedbacks from CAM5 to CAM6 is not a result of changes in parameter values. Notably, the CAM6 PPE is run with a more recent version of CAM6 (CAM6.3) than was used for AMIP (CAM6.0) and has a smaller total cloud feedback (0.56 W m22 K21) as compared to CAM6.0 (0.81 W m22 K21) owing primarily to reductions in low clouds over the tropics and midlatitudes. The work highlights the large sensitivity of cloud feedbacks to both parameter values and structural details in CAM6.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)213-277
Number of pages65
JournalJournal of Climate
Volume37
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 10 2024

Keywords

  • Climate sensitivity
  • Cloud parameterizations
  • Feedback

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