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An inter-comparison of regional climate models for Europe: model performance in present-day climate
Authors:Daniela Jacob  Lars Bärring  Ole Bøssing Christensen  Jens Hesselbjerg Christensen  Manuel de Castro  Michel Déqué  Filippo Giorgi  Stefan Hagemann  Martin Hirschi  Richard Jones  Erik Kjellström  Geert Lenderink  Burkhardt Rockel  Enrique Sánchez  Christoph Schär  Sonia I Seneviratne  Samuel Somot  Aad van Ulden  Bart van den Hurk
Institution:1.Max Planck Institute for Meteorology,Hamburg,Germany;2.Danish Meteorological Institute,Copenhagen,Denmark;3.Institut for Atmospheric and Climate Science ETH,Zürich,Switzerland;4.Global Modeling and Assimilation Office NASA, Goddard Space Flight Center,Greenbelt,USA;5.Rossby Centre,SMHI,Norrk?ping,Sweden;6.Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute,de Bilt,The Netherlands;7.GKSS Forschungszentrum Geesthacht,Geesthacht,Germany;8.Météo-France CNRM,Toulouse Cedex,France;9.Met Office Hadley Centre (Reading Unit), Meteorology Building,University of Reading,Reading,UK;10.The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics,Trieste,Italy;11.Facultad de Ciencias del Medio Ambiente,Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha,Toledo,Spain
Abstract:The analysis of possible regional climate changes over Europe as simulated by 10 regional climate models within the context of PRUDENCE requires a careful investigation of possible systematic biases in the models. The purpose of this paper is to identify how the main model systematic biases vary across the different models. Two fundamental aspects of model validation are addressed here: the ability to simulate (1) the long-term (30 or 40 years) mean climate and (2) the inter-annual variability. The analysis concentrates on near-surface air temperature and precipitation over land and focuses mainly on winter and summer. In general, there is a warm bias with respect to the CRU data set in these extreme seasons and a tendency to cold biases in the transition seasons. In winter the typical spread (standard deviation) between the models is 1 K. During summer there is generally a better agreement between observed and simulated values of inter-annual variability although there is a relatively clear signal that the modeled temperature variability is larger than suggested by observations, while precipitation variability is closer to observations. The areas with warm (cold) bias in winter generally exhibit wet (dry) biases, whereas the relationship is the reverse during summer (though much less clear, coupling warm (cold) biases with dry (wet) ones). When comparing the RCMs with their driving GCM, they generally reproduce the large-scale circulation of the GCM though in some cases there are substantial differences between regional biases in surface temperature and precipitation.
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