Interannual Variabilities of High Clouds Seen by AIRS and Comparison with CAM5 simulations Yuk Yung,...

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Interannual Variabilities of High Clouds Seen by AIRS and Comparison with CAM5 simulations

Yuk Yung, Hui Su, Katie, Hazel et al.

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Introduction

• AIRS observations since 2004 provide a unique opportunity to examine decade-long simultaneous cloud and water vapor variabilities.

• These datasets serve as important references to evaluate climate models.

• We examine AIRS retrieved high cloud fraction and corresponding humidity distributions in the upper troposphere.

• CAM5 simulations driven by observed SST from 2004 to 2013 are analyzed.

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Climatological Cloud Fraction from AIRS and CAM5

• (left column) AIRS high, middle and low cloud fraction climatology is shown in Kahn et al. (2014). Explain the definitions of three cloud types.

• (right column) CAM5 corresponding cloud fraction spatial maps.

• This study focuses on interannual variability of clouds.

• EOF analyses are performed on the de-seasonalized monthly anomalies (3-month running mean is applied to the time series).

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Explained Variance of EOF modes

• Here, it can be interesting to show the explained variances of leading EOF modes, from EOF1 to EOF6 (or lower) for both AIRS and CAM5 simulations, for high, middle and low clouds.

• The EOF1 in the AIRS data is quite dominant, explaining about 25% of the variance, while the EOF1 in CAM5 explains only 15% of the variance.

• The EOF2 in the AIRS data explains ~6% of variance, while the EOF2 in CAM5 explains ~8% of the variance.

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EOF1

EOF 1 (high): the Canonical ENSO Signal

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EOF 1 (middle): the Canonical ENSO Signal

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EOF 1 (low): the Canonical ENSO Signal

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Comparing CAM5 with AIRS

High Clouds—AIRS and CAM5 (EOF 1)

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Middle Clouds—AIRS and CAM5 (EOF 1)

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Low Clouds—AIRS and CAM5 (EOF 1)

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EOF2

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EOF 2 (high): the ENSO Modoki

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EOF 2 (middle): the ENSO Modoki

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EOF 2 (low): the ENSO Modoki

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Comparing CAM5 with AIRS

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High Clouds—AIRS and CAM5 (EOF 2)

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Middle Clouds—AIRS and CAM5 (EOF 2)

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Clouds—AIRS and CAM5 (Low, EOF 2)

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Conclusions

• The most dominant mode (EOF 1) of clouds observed by AIRS shows a consistent pattern with the canonical ENSO for all three cloud types.

• CAM5 captures well the EOF 1 of high clouds, but its leading modes of middle and low clouds are not as well-simulated as the high clouds.

• The second dominant mode of clouds has a weak resemblance to the ENSO Modoki.

• CAM5 has a difficulty in reproducing the EOF 2 of all three types of clouds.

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