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Comparing transient, accelerated, and equilibrium simulations of the last 30 000 years with the GENIE-1 model

Comparing transient, accelerated, and equilibrium simulations of the last 30 000 years with the GENIE-1 model
Comparing transient, accelerated, and equilibrium simulations of the last 30 000 years with the GENIE-1 model
We examine several aspects of the ocean-atmosphere system over the last 30000 years, by carrying out simulations with prescribed ice sheets, atmospheric CO2 concentration, and orbital parameters. We use the GENIE-1 model with a frictional geostrophic ocean, dynamic sea ice, an energy balance atmosphere, and a land-surface scheme with fixed vegetation. A transient simulation, with boundary conditions derived from ice-core records and ice sheet reconstructions, is compared with equilibrium snapshot simulations, including the Last Glacial Maximum (21000 year sbefore present; 21 kyrBP), mid-Holocene (6 kyrBP) and preindustrial. The equilibrium snapshot simulations are all very similar to their corresponding time period in the transient simulation, indicating that over the last 30000 years, the model’s ocean-atmosphere system is close to equilibrium with its boundary conditions. However, our simulations neglect the transfer of fresh water from and to the ocean, resulting from the growth and decay of ice sheets, which would, in reality, lead to greater disequilibrium. Additionally, the GENIE-1 model exhibits a rather limited response in terms of its Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) over the 30000 years; a more sensitive AMOC would also be likely to lead to greater disequilibrium. We investigate the method of accelerating the boundary conditions of a transient simulation and find that the Southern Ocean is the region most affected by the acceleration. The Northern Hemisphere, even with a factor of 10 acceleration, is relatively unaffected. The results are robust to changes to several tunable parameters in the model. They also hold when a higher vertical resolution is used in the ocean.
1814-9332
221-235
Lunt, D.J.
5bfca8db-49a7-45dd-9855-43606a58788b
Williamson, M.S.
4d517b9a-3893-41af-887f-c6fb7b62ab58
Valdes, P.J.
7b271d19-a4cb-4fc3-af4e-6745239c01d8
Lenton, T.M.
f2b4fe3d-ef5e-4c85-9677-bfc20c266b65
Marsh, R.
702c2e7e-ac19-4019-abd9-a8614ab27717
Lunt, D.J.
5bfca8db-49a7-45dd-9855-43606a58788b
Williamson, M.S.
4d517b9a-3893-41af-887f-c6fb7b62ab58
Valdes, P.J.
7b271d19-a4cb-4fc3-af4e-6745239c01d8
Lenton, T.M.
f2b4fe3d-ef5e-4c85-9677-bfc20c266b65
Marsh, R.
702c2e7e-ac19-4019-abd9-a8614ab27717

Lunt, D.J., Williamson, M.S., Valdes, P.J., Lenton, T.M. and Marsh, R. (2006) Comparing transient, accelerated, and equilibrium simulations of the last 30 000 years with the GENIE-1 model. Climate of the Past, 2 (2), 221-235.

Record type: Article

Abstract

We examine several aspects of the ocean-atmosphere system over the last 30000 years, by carrying out simulations with prescribed ice sheets, atmospheric CO2 concentration, and orbital parameters. We use the GENIE-1 model with a frictional geostrophic ocean, dynamic sea ice, an energy balance atmosphere, and a land-surface scheme with fixed vegetation. A transient simulation, with boundary conditions derived from ice-core records and ice sheet reconstructions, is compared with equilibrium snapshot simulations, including the Last Glacial Maximum (21000 year sbefore present; 21 kyrBP), mid-Holocene (6 kyrBP) and preindustrial. The equilibrium snapshot simulations are all very similar to their corresponding time period in the transient simulation, indicating that over the last 30000 years, the model’s ocean-atmosphere system is close to equilibrium with its boundary conditions. However, our simulations neglect the transfer of fresh water from and to the ocean, resulting from the growth and decay of ice sheets, which would, in reality, lead to greater disequilibrium. Additionally, the GENIE-1 model exhibits a rather limited response in terms of its Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) over the 30000 years; a more sensitive AMOC would also be likely to lead to greater disequilibrium. We investigate the method of accelerating the boundary conditions of a transient simulation and find that the Southern Ocean is the region most affected by the acceleration. The Northern Hemisphere, even with a factor of 10 acceleration, is relatively unaffected. The results are robust to changes to several tunable parameters in the model. They also hold when a higher vertical resolution is used in the ocean.

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Published date: 2006

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 43854
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/43854
ISSN: 1814-9332
PURE UUID: 26fc4e13-291f-4c97-83a1-2daed5186e10

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Date deposited: 31 Jan 2007
Last modified: 09 Jan 2022 03:38

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Contributors

Author: D.J. Lunt
Author: M.S. Williamson
Author: P.J. Valdes
Author: T.M. Lenton
Author: R. Marsh

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