Spectral Surface Emissivity Improves Arctic Climate Simulation

Climate models commonly simulate too cold surface temperatures in the Arctic. In the Community Earth System Model (CESM), the systematic cold bias in the winter is about 7 Kelvin degrees when averaged over the Arctic. Kuo et al. [2018] found that using more realistic spectrally resolved surface emissivity can significantly reduce the CESM cold bias to about 1 Kelvin degree. The improved surface emissivity also introduces a longwave equivalent of the positive shortwave albedo feedback that had received little attention before. This positive feedback affects the simulated magnitude of climate variability and change in the Arctic.

Citation: Kuo, C., Feldman, D. R., Huang, X., Flanner, M., Yang, P., & Chen, X. [2018]. Time-dependent cryospheric longwave surface emissivity feedback in the Community Earth System Model. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 123. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JD027595

—Minghua Zhang, Editor-in-Chief, JGR: Atmospheres

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