Colorado State University

Refereed Publications

Giorgetta, M. A. and Brokopf, R. and Crueger, T. and Esch, M. and Fiedler, S. and Helmert, J. and Hohenegger, C. and Kornblueh, L. and Köhler, M. and Manzini, E. and Mauritsen, T. and Nam, C. and Raddatz, T. and Rast, S. and Reinert, D. and Sakradzija, M. and Schmidt, H. and Schneck, R. and Schnur, R. and Silvers, L. and Wan, H. and Zängl, G. and Stevens, B., : ICON-A, the Atmosphere Component of the ICON Earth System Model: I. Model Description. Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, 10 , https://doi.org/10.1029/2017MS001242

Key Points

  • Physics package for climate modeling is coupled to a nonhydrostatic dynamical core
  • Tuning in five steps to obtain a balanced net radiation at top of atmosphere
  • Overall biases of ICON-A are comparable to ECHAM6.3, but circulation biases remain due to problems with parameterized drag

  • Plain Language Summary

    Abstract

    Abstract ICON-A is the new icosahedral nonhydrostatic (ICON) atmospheric general circulation model in a configuration using the Max Planck Institute physics package, which originates from the ECHAM6 general circulation model, and has been adapted to account for the changed dynamical core framework. The coupling scheme between dynamics and physics employs a sequential updating by dynamics and physics, and a fixed sequence of the physical processes similar to ECHAM6. To allow a meaningful initial comparison between ICON-A and the established ECHAM6-LR model, a setup with similar, low resolution in terms of number of grid points and levels is chosen. The ICON-A model is tuned on the base of the Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (AMIP) experiment aiming primarily at a well balanced top-of atmosphere energy budget to make the model suitable for coupled climate and Earth system modeling. The tuning addresses first the moisture and cloud distribution to achieve the top-of-atmosphere energy balance, followed by the tuning of the parameterized dynamic drag aiming at reduced wind errors in the troposphere. The resulting version of ICON-A has overall biases, which are comparable to those of ECHAM6. Problematic specific biases remain in the vertical distribution of clouds and in the stratospheric circulation, where the winter vortices are too weak. Biases in precipitable water and tropospheric temperature are, however, reduced compared to the ECHAM6. ICON-A will serve as the basis of further development and as the atmosphere component to the coupled model, ICON-Earth system model (ESM).

    Key Figure

    Key Figure

    Acknowledgments