Search Results

You are looking at 1 - 3 of 3 items for

  • Author or Editor: Ben J. Shipway x
  • Refine by Access: Content accessible to me x
Clear All Modify Search
Zachary J. Lebo
,
Ben J. Shipway
,
Jiwen Fan
,
Istvan Geresdi
,
Adrian Hill
,
Annette Miltenberger
,
Hugh Morrison
,
Phil Rosenberg
,
Adam Varble
, and
Lulin Xue
Full access
Xubin Zeng
,
Daniel Klocke
,
Ben J. Shipway
,
Martin S. Singh
,
Irina Sandu
,
Walter Hannah
,
Peter Bogenschutz
,
Yunyan Zhang
,
Hugh Morrison
,
Michael Pritchard
, and
Catherine Rio
Full access
Steven C. Hardiman
,
Ian A. Boutle
,
Andrew C. Bushell
,
Neal Butchart
,
Mike J. P. Cullen
,
Paul R. Field
,
Kalli Furtado
,
James C. Manners
,
Sean F. Milton
,
Cyril Morcrette
,
Fiona M. O’Connor
,
Ben J. Shipway
,
Chris Smith
,
David N. Walters
,
Martin R. Willett
,
Keith D. Williams
,
Nigel Wood
,
N. Luke Abraham
,
James Keeble
,
Amanda C. Maycock
,
John Thuburn
, and
Matthew T. Woodhouse

Abstract

A warm bias in tropical tropopause temperature is found in the Met Office Unified Model (MetUM), in common with most models from phase 5 of CMIP (CMIP5). Key dynamical, microphysical, and radiative processes influencing the tropical tropopause temperature and lower-stratospheric water vapor concentrations in climate models are investigated using the MetUM. A series of sensitivity experiments are run to separate the effects of vertical advection, ice optical and microphysical properties, convection, cirrus clouds, and atmospheric composition on simulated tropopause temperature and lower-stratospheric water vapor concentrations in the tropics. The numerical accuracy of the vertical advection, determined in the MetUM by the choice of interpolation and conservation schemes used, is found to be particularly important. Microphysical and radiative processes are found to influence stratospheric water vapor both through modifying the tropical tropopause temperature and through modifying upper-tropospheric water vapor concentrations, allowing more water vapor to be advected into the stratosphere. The representation of any of the processes discussed can act to significantly reduce biases in tropical tropopause temperature and stratospheric water vapor in a physical way, thereby improving climate simulations.

Full access