Abstract

AbstractCurrent climate models generally reflect too little solar radiation over the Southern Ocean, which may be the leading cause of the prevalent sea surface temperature biases in climate models. The authors study the role of clouds on the radiation biases in atmosphere-only simulations of the Cloud Feedback Model Intercomparison Project phase 2 (CFMIP2), as clouds have a leading role in controlling the solar radiation absorbed at those latitudes. The authors composite daily data around cyclone centers in the latitude band between 40° and 70°S during the summer. They use cloud property estimates from satellite to classify clouds into different regimes, which allow them to relate the cloud regimes and their associated radiative biases to the meteorological conditions in which they occur. The cloud regimes are defined using cloud properties retrieved using passive sensors and may suffer from the errors associated with this type of retrievals. The authors use information from the Cloud–Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO) lidar to investigate in more detail the properties of the “midlevel” cloud regime. Most of the model biases occur in the cold-air side of the cyclone composite, and the cyclone composite accounts for most of the climatological error in that latitudinal band. The midlevel regime is the main contributor to reflected shortwave radiation biases. CALIPSO data show that the midlevel cloud regime is dominated by two main cloud types: cloud with tops actually at midlevel and low-level cloud. Improving the simulation of these cloud types should help reduce the biases in the simulation of the solar radiation budget in the Southern Ocean in climate models.

Highlights

  • The Southern Ocean plays an important role in the earth’s climate

  • The reason for this is that the subset of models analyzed here contains the four models (IPSL and Max Planck Institute (MPI) models) of the entire ensemble that show a high reflected shortwave radiation (RSR) bias, which should be borne in mind in the analysis presented below

  • It has been proposed that this surplus of solar energy absorbed in the Southern Hemisphere midlatitudes is a leading cause of the warm sea surface temperature (SST) biases in climate models

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Summary

JANUARY 2014

@ Environment Canada, Toronto, Ontario, Canada & LMD/IPSL, CNRS, Universite Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France ** Meteorological Research Institute, Japan Meteorological Agency, Tsukuba, Japan. 11 Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany ## Beijing Climate Center, China Meteorological Administration, Beijing, China. @@ National Institute for Environmental Studies, Tsukuba, Japan (Manuscript received 21 March 2013, in final form 30 July 2013)

Introduction
Cyclone compositing
Radiative impact of cloud regimes in cyclonic conditions
Is the midlevel regime really midlevel cloud?
Findings
Conclusions

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