GLACE: The Global Land–Atmosphere Coupling Experiment. Part I: Overview
Goddard Space Flight Center · Institute of Global Environment and Society · +14 more institutions
Abstract
Abstract The Global Land–Atmosphere Coupling Experiment (GLACE) is a model intercomparison study focusing on a typically neglected yet critical element of numerical weather and climate modeling: land–atmosphere coupling strength, or the degree to which anomalies in land surface state (e.g., soil moisture) can affect rainfall generation and other atmospheric processes. The 12 AGCM groups participating in GLACE performed a series of simple numerical experiments that allow the objective quantification of this element for boreal summer. The derived coupling strengths vary widely. Some similarity, however, is found in the spatial patterns generated by the models, with enough similarity to pinpoint multimodel “hot…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.10
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 52
Authors
26Topics & keywords
- Atmosphere (unit)
- Environmental science
- Precipitation
- Climatology
- Atmospheric sciences
- Coupling (piping)
- Boreal
- Climate model
- Climate action