Evaluation of Six Atmospheric Reanalyses over Arctic Sea Ice from Winter to Early Summer

被引:142
作者
Graham, Robert M. [1 ]
Cohen, Lana [1 ]
Ritzhaupt, Nicole [2 ]
Segger, Benjamin [3 ]
Graversen, Rune G. [4 ]
Rinke, Annette [3 ]
Walden, Von P. [5 ]
Granskog, Mats A. [1 ]
Hudson, Stephen R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Norwegian Polar Res Inst, Fram Ctr, Tromso, Norway
[2] Univ Bonn, Dept Meteorol, Bonn, Germany
[3] Helmholtz Ctr Polar & Marine Res, Alfred Wegener Inst, Potsdam, Germany
[4] Univ Tromso, Dept Phys & Technol, Tromso, Norway
[5] Washington State Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Pullman, WA 99164 USA
关键词
Atmosphere; Arctic; Sea ice; Model evaluation; performance; Reanalysis data; ECMWF FORECAST MODEL; MIXED-PHASE CLOUDS; BOUNDARY-LAYER; ERA-INTERIM; PART I; OCEAN; AMPLIFICATION; SIMULATION; THICKNESS; BUDGET;
D O I
10.1175/JCLI-D-18-0643.1
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
This study evaluates the performance of six atmospheric reanalyses (ERA-Interim, ERA5, JRA-55, CFSv2, MERRA-2, and ASRv2) over Arctic sea ice from winter to early summer. The reanalyses are evaluated using observations from the Norwegian Young Sea Ice campaign (N-ICE2015), a 5-month ice drift in pack ice north of Svalbard. N-ICE2015 observations include surface meteorology, vertical profiles from radiosondes, as well as radiative and turbulent heat fluxes. The reanalyses simulate surface analysis variables well throughout the campaign, but have difficulties with most forecast variables. Wintertime (January-March) correlation coefficients between the reanalyses and observations are above 0.90 for the surface pressure, 2-m temperature, total column water vapor, and downward longwave flux. However, all reanalyses have a positive wintertime 2-m temperature bias, ranging from 1 degrees to 4 degrees C, and negative (i.e., upward) net longwave bias of 3-19 W m(-2). These biases are associated with poorly represented surface inversions and are largest during cold-stable periods. Notably, the recent ERA5 and ASRv2 datasets have some of the largest temperature and net longwave biases, respectively. During spring (April-May), reanalyses fail to simulate observed persistent cloud layers. Therefore they overestimate the net shortwave flux (5-79 W m(-2)) and underestimate the net longwave flux (8-38 W m(-2)). Promisingly, ERA5 provides the best estimates of downward radiative fluxes in spring and summer, suggesting improved forecasting of Arctic cloud cover. All reanalyses exhibit large negative (upward) residual heat flux biases during winter, and positive (downward) biases during summer. Turbulent heat fluxes over sea ice are simulated poorly in all seasons.
引用
收藏
页码:4121 / 4143
页数:23
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