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Dive into the research topics where C. A. Senior is active.

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Featured researches published by C. A. Senior.


Journal of Climate | 2006

The New Hadley Centre Climate Model (HadGEM1): Evaluation of Coupled Simulations

T. C. Johns; C. F. Durman; Helene T. Banks; Malcolm J. Roberts; A. J. McLaren; Jeff Ridley; C. A. Senior; Keith D. Williams; Andy Jones; Graham J. Rickard; S. Cusack; William Ingram; M. Crucifix; David M. H. Sexton; Manoj Joshi; Buwen Dong; Hilary Spencer; R. S. R. Hill; Jonathan M. Gregory; A. B. Keen; Anne Pardaens; Jason Lowe; Alejandro Bodas-Salcedo; S. Stark; Y. Searl

Abstract A new coupled general circulation climate model developed at the Met Offices Hadley Centre is presented, and aspects of its performance in climate simulations run for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report (IPCC AR4) documented with reference to previous models. The Hadley Centre Global Environmental Model version 1 (HadGEM1) is built around a new atmospheric dynamical core; uses higher resolution than the previous Hadley Centre model, HadCM3; and contains several improvements in its formulation including interactive atmospheric aerosols (sulphate, black carbon, biomass burning, and sea salt) plus their direct and indirect effects. The ocean component also has higher resolution and incorporates a sea ice component more advanced than HadCM3 in terms of both dynamics and thermodynamics. HadGEM1 thus permits experiments including some interactive processes not feasible with HadCM3. The simulation of present-day mean climate in HadGEM1 is significantly better overall ...


Journal of Climate | 2012

Realism of Rainfall in a Very High-Resolution Regional Climate Model

Elizabeth J. Kendon; Nigel M. Roberts; C. A. Senior; Malcolm J. Roberts

AbstractThe realistic representation of rainfall on the local scale in climate models remains a key challenge. Realism encompasses the full spatial and temporal structure of rainfall, and is a key indicator of model skill in representing the underlying processes. In particular, if rainfall is more realistic in a climate model, there is greater confidence in its projections of future change.In this study, the realism of rainfall in a very high-resolution (1.5 km) regional climate model (RCM) is compared to a coarser-resolution 12-km RCM. This is the first time a convection-permitting model has been run for an extended period (1989–2008) over a region of the United Kingdom, allowing the characteristics of rainfall to be evaluated in a climatological sense. In particular, the duration and spatial extent of hourly rainfall across the southern United Kingdom is examined, with a key focus on heavy rainfall.Rainfall in the 1.5-km RCM is found to be much more realistic than in the 12-km RCM. In the 12-km RCM, hea...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2000

The time‐dependence of climate sensitivity

C. A. Senior; J. F. B. Mitchell

A doubled CO2 coupled ocean-atmosphere experiment has been run for over 800 years. The ‘effective’ equilibrium climate sensitivity to a doubling of CO2 (the equilibrium response of the model assuming the feedbacks remained constant at the value found at any given point of the transient response) is calculated throughout the run and found to increase by around 40%. The time-dependence is associated with differences in cloud feedback arising from inter-hemispheric temperature differences due to the slower warming rate of the Southern Ocean. The time-dependence of the climate response has implications for the use of simpler models in scaling GCM results to different scenarios of forcing.


Weather | 2002

Projections of Future Climate Change

Matthew D. Collins; C. A. Senior

Contents: Executive Summary 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Climate and Climate Change 9.3 Projections of Climate Change 9.4 General Summary Appendix 9.1: Tuning of a Simple Climate Model toAOGCM Results References


Journal of Climate | 1995

On Surface Temperature, Greenhouse Gases, and Aerosols: Models and Observations

J. F. B. Mitchell; R. A. Davis; William Ingram; C. A. Senior

Abstract The effect of changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations and sulphate aerosols on near-surface temperature is investigated using a version of the Hadley Centre atmospheric model coupled to a mixed layer ocean. The scattering of sunlight by sulphate aerosols is represented by appropriately enhancing the surface albede. On doubling atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, the global mean temperature increases by 5.2 K. An integration with a 39% increase in CO2, giving the estimated change in radiative heating due to increases in greenhouse gases since 1900, produced an equilibrium warming of 2.3 K, which, even allowing for oceanic inertia, is significantly higher than the observed warming over the same period. Furthermore, the simulation suggests a substantial warming everywhere, whereas the observations indicate isolated regions of cooling including parts of the northern midlatitude continents. The addition of an estimate of the effect of scattering by current industrial aerosols (unce...


Climate Dynamics | 1993

Tropical disturbances in a GCM

Reindert J. Haarsma; J F B Mitchell; C. A. Senior

We have analyzed the tropical disturbances in a 11-layer atmospheric general circulation model (GCM) on a 2.5° × 3.75° horizontal grid coupled to a 50 m-mixed layer ocean. Due to the coarse resolution, the GCM is unable to resolve adequately tropical cyclones. The tropical disturbances simulated by the GCM are much weaker and have a much larger horizontal extent. However, they still display much of the essential physics of tropical cyclones, including low-level convergence of mass and moisture, upper tropospheric outflow and a warm core. For most ocean basins the spatial and temporal distribution of the simulated tropical disturbances compares well with the observed tropical cyclones. On doubling the CO2 concentration, the number of simulated tropical disturbances increases by about 50%. There is a relative increase in the number of more intense tropical disturbances, whose maximum windspeed increases by about 20%. This agrees with the theoretical estimate of Emanuel. However, because the low-resolution of the GCM severely restricts their maximum possible intensity, simulated changes in tropical disturbance intensity should be interpreted cautiously.


Journal of Climate | 2001

Transient Climate Change in the Hadley Centre Models: The Role of Physical Processes

K. D. Williams; C. A. Senior; J. F. B. Mitchell

Abstract A comparison of the response to increasing greenhouse gas concentrations of two versions of the Met Offices (Hadley Centre) coupled atmosphere–ocean model reveals differences that result in large local variations in the modeled impact of climate change. With the aim of understanding the important processes and feedbacks associated with climate change, and ultimately reducing uncertainty in predictions, a series of sensitivity experiments were performed using a coupled atmosphere–mixed layer ocean model. The primary differences in the atmospheric response of the coupled models studied are found to be due to changes made to the physical representation of the atmosphere rather than to the ocean. In particular, many of the different patterns of response can be explained through changes made to the boundary layer scheme combining in a nonlinear way with changes to the cloud scheme to alter the tropical temperature and precipitation response in the model. A new land surface exchange scheme largely acc...


Climate Dynamics | 1993

Validation of GCM control simulations using indices of daily airflow types over the British Isles

Mike Hulme; K R Briffal; P. D. Jones; C. A. Senior

In this study, the control simulations of two general circulation model (GCM) experiments are assessed in terms of their ability to reproduce realistic ‘real world’ weather. The models examined are the UK Meteorological Office high-resolution atmospheric model (UKHI) and a coupled ocean/atmosphere model of the Max Planck Institut für Meteorologic, Hamburg (MPI). An objective classification of daily airflow patterns over the British Isles is used as a basis for comparing the frequencies of model-generated weather types with the frequencies derived from 110 years of observed mean-sea-level pressure (MSLP) fields. The weather-type frequencies generated by the GCMs, and their relationships with simulated monthly mean temperatures and total precipitation over the UK, are compared, season by season, with similar results derived using the observational data. An index of gale frequencies over the British Isles, derived from a similar objective analysis of daily MSLP fields, is used to evaluate the ability of the GCMs to simulate the observed frequency of storm events. One advantage of using 110 years of observational data is that the observed decadal-scale variability of climate can be introduced into this type of validation exercise. Both the GCMs assessed here are too cyclonic in winter. The seasonality of both anticyclonic and cyclonic types is much too strong in MPI and summer precipitation in this model is greatly underestimated. MPI simulates the annual cycle of temperature well, while UKHI successfully reproduces the annual cycle of precipitation. The analysis also indicates that the summer temperature variability of the two models is not driven by circulation changes.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Evaluating the East Asian monsoon simulation in climate models

Kyung-On Boo; Gill Martin; Alistair Sellar; C. A. Senior; Young-Hwa Byun

[1] Metrics are widely used as a tool for model evaluation to assess both the performance of and changes between different generations of models. However, often the choice of metrics is limited to simple root-mean-square statistics, and it can be difficult to interpret the quality of the models in representing important physical processes. In this study, metrics have been gathered from the available literature and have been refined and augmented to include the climatology, the evolution of the rainy season, and the interannual variability of the East Asian monsoon. We investigate how these process-based metrics may be used to evaluate the simulation of the characteristics of the East Asian monsoon in climate models. The metrics confirm previous findings that climate models tend to exhibit skill in simulating the climatology and variability of temperature and winds, with lower skill in simulating precipitation distribution, seasonal cycle, and interannual variability. However, this work illustrates that a wide variety of metrics is required to make a comprehensive evaluation of East Asian climate in global circulation models. These must include consideration of both the local conditions and the large-scale circulation and measures of the seasonal cycle and interannual variability. It is also apparent that careful choice of analyzed regions must be made to avoid cancellation of biases. Such comprehensive evaluation of regional climate can be useful in estimation of current climate model performance and model development.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2007

The Met Office Hadley Centre climate modelling capability: the competing requirements for improved resolution, complexity and dealing with uncertainty

V Pope; Simon J. Brown; R Clark; Matthew D. Collins; W. J. Collins; C. Dearden; J Gunson; Glen R. Harris; Chris D. Jones; A. B. Keen; Jason Lowe; Mark A. Ringer; C. A. Senior; Stephen Sitch; Mark J. Webb; S. Woodward

Predictions of future climate change require complex computer models of the climate system to represent the full range of processes and interactions that influence climate. The Met Office Hadley Centre uses ‘families’ of models as part of the Met Office Unified Model Framework to address different classes of problems. The HadGEM family is a suite of state-of-the-art global environment models that are used to reduce uncertainty and represent and predict complex feedbacks. The HadCM3 family is a suite of well established but cheaper models that are used for multiple simulations, for example, to quantify uncertainty or to test the impact of multiple emissions scenarios.

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Reindert J. Haarsma

Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute

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