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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey Jonas is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey Jonas.


Climate Dynamics | 2007

Climate simulations for 1880–2003 with GISS modelE

James E. Hansen; Makiko Sato; Reto Ruedy; Pushker A. Kharecha; Andrew A. Lacis; Ron L. Miller; Larissa Nazarenko; K. Lo; Gavin A. Schmidt; Gary L. Russell; Igor Aleinov; Susanne E. Bauer; E. Baum; Brian Cairns; V. M. Canuto; Mark A. Chandler; Y. Cheng; Armond Cohen; A. D. Del Genio; G. Faluvegi; Eric L. Fleming; Andrew D. Friend; Timothy M. Hall; Charles H. Jackman; Jeffrey Jonas; Maxwell Kelley; Nancy Y. Kiang; D. Koch; Gordon Labow; J. Lerner

We carry out climate simulations for 1880–2003 with GISS modelE driven by ten measured or estimated climate forcings. An ensemble of climate model runs is carried out for each forcing acting individually and for all forcing mechanisms acting together. We compare side-by-side simulated climate change for each forcing, all forcings, observations, unforced variability among model ensemble members, and, if available, observed variability. Discrepancies between observations and simulations with all forcings are due to model deficiencies, inaccurate or incomplete forcings, and imperfect observations. Although there are notable discrepancies between model and observations, the fidelity is sufficient to encourage use of the model for simulations of future climate change. By using a fixed well-documented model and accurately defining the 1880–2003 forcings, we aim to provide a benchmark against which the effect of improvements in the model, climate forcings, and observations can be tested. Principal model deficiencies include unrealistically weak tropical El Nino-like variability and a poor distribution of sea ice, with too much sea ice in the Northern Hemisphere and too little in the Southern Hemisphere. Greatest uncertainties in the forcings are the temporal and spatial variations of anthropogenic aerosols and their indirect effects on clouds.


Journal of Climate | 2005

Cumulus Microphysics and Climate Sensitivity

Anthony D. Del Genio; William Kovari; Mao-Sung Yao; Jeffrey Jonas

Precipitation processes in convective storms are potentially a major regulator of cloud feedback. An unresolved issue is how the partitioning of convective condensate between precipitation-size particles that fall out of updrafts and smaller particles that are detrained to form anvil clouds will change as the climate warms. Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) observations of tropical oceanic convective storms indicate higher precipitation efficiency at warmer sea surface temperature (SST) but also suggest that cumulus anvil sizes, albedos, and ice water paths become insensitive to warming at high temperatures. International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP) data show that instantaneous cirrus and deep convective cloud fractions are positively correlated and increase with SST except at the highest temperatures, but are sensitive to variations in large-scale vertical velocity. A simple conceptual model based on a Marshall–Palmer drop size distribution, empirical terminal velocity–particle size relationships, and assumed cumulus updraft speeds reproduces the observed tendency for detrained condensate to approach a limiting value at high SST. These results suggest that the climatic behavior of observed tropical convective clouds is intermediate between the extremes required to support the thermostat and adaptive iris hypotheses.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2015

Hurricanes and Climate: The U.S. CLIVAR Working Group on Hurricanes

Kevin Walsh; Suzana J. Camargo; Gabriel A. Vecchi; Anne Sophie Daloz; James B. Elsner; Kerry A. Emanuel; Michael Horn; Young-Kwon Lim; Malcolm J. Roberts; Christina M. Patricola; Enrico Scoccimarro; Adam H. Sobel; Sarah Strazzo; Gabriele Villarini; Michael Wehner; Ming Zhao; James P. Kossin; Tim LaRow; Kazuyoshi Oouchi; Siegfried D. Schubert; Hui Wang; Julio T. Bacmeister; Ping Chang; Fabrice Chauvin; Christiane Jablonowski; Arun Kumar; Hiroyuki Murakami; Tomoaki Ose; Kevin A. Reed; R. Saravanan

AbstractWhile a quantitative climate theory of tropical cyclone formation remains elusive, considerable progress has been made recently in our ability to simulate tropical cyclone climatologies and to understand the relationship between climate and tropical cyclone formation. Climate models are now able to simulate a realistic rate of global tropical cyclone formation, although simulation of the Atlantic tropical cyclone climatology remains challenging unless horizontal resolutions finer than 50 km are employed. This article summarizes published research from the idealized experiments of the Hurricane Working Group of U.S. Climate and Ocean: Variability, Predictability and Change (CLIVAR). This work, combined with results from other model simulations, has strengthened relationships between tropical cyclone formation rates and climate variables such as midtropospheric vertical velocity, with decreased climatological vertical velocities leading to decreased tropical cyclone formation. Systematic differences...


Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems | 2014

Characteristics of tropical cyclones in high-resolution models in the present climate

Daniel A. Shaevitz; Suzana J. Camargo; Adam H. Sobel; Jeffrey Jonas; Daehyun Kim; Arun Kumar; T. E. LaRow; Young-Kwon Lim; Hiroyuki Murakami; Kevin A. Reed; Malcolm J. Roberts; Enrico Scoccimarro; Pier Luigi Vidale; Hui Wang; Michael F. Wehner; Ming Zhao; Naomi Henderson

The global characteristics of tropical cyclones (TCs) simulated by several climate models are analyzed and compared with observations. The global climate models were forced by the same sea surface temperature (SST) fields in two types of experiments, using climatological SST and interannually varying SST. TC tracks and intensities are derived from each models output fields by the group who ran that model, using their own preferred tracking scheme; the study considers the combination of model and tracking scheme as a single modeling system, and compares the properties derived from the different systems. Overall, the observed geographic distribution of global TC frequency was reasonably well reproduced. As expected, with the exception of one model, intensities of the simulated TC were lower than in observations, to a degree that varies considerably across models.


Journal of Climate | 2014

Tracking Scheme Dependence of Simulated Tropical Cyclone Response to Idealized Climate Simulations

Michael Horn; Kevin Walsh; Ming Zhao; Suzana J. Camargo; Enrico Scoccimarro; Hiroyuki Murakami; Hui Wang; Andrew Ballinger; Arun Kumar; Daniel A. Shaevitz; Jeffrey Jonas; Kazuyoshi Oouchi

AbstractFuture tropical cyclone activity is a topic of great scientific and societal interest. In the absence of a climate theory of tropical cyclogenesis, general circulation models are the primary tool available for investigating the issue. However, the identification of tropical cyclones in model data at moderate resolution is complex, and numerous schemes have been developed for their detection.The influence of different tracking schemes on detected tropical cyclone activity and responses in the Hurricane Working Group experiments is examined herein. These are idealized atmospheric general circulation model experiments aimed at determining and distinguishing the effects of increased sea surface temperature and other increased CO2 effects on tropical cyclone activity. Two tracking schemes are applied to these data and the tracks provided by each modeling group are analyzed.The results herein indicate moderate agreement between the different tracking methods, with some models and experiments showing bet...


Journal of Climate | 2015

Cluster Analysis of Downscaled and Explicitly Simulated North Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Tracks

Anne Sophie Daloz; Suzana J. Camargo; James P. Kossin; Kerry A. Emanuel; Michael Horn; Jeffrey Jonas; Daehyun Kim; T. E. LaRow; Young-Kwon Lim; Christina M. Patricola; Malcolm J. Roberts; Enrico Scoccimarro; Daniel A. Shaevitz; Pier Luigi Vidale; Hui Wang; Michael F. Wehner; Ming Zhao

AbstractA realistic representation of the North Atlantic tropical cyclone tracks is crucial as it allows, for example, explaining potential changes in U.S. landfalling systems. Here, the authors present a tentative study that examines the ability of recent climate models to represent North Atlantic tropical cyclone tracks. Tracks from two types of climate models are evaluated: explicit tracks are obtained from tropical cyclones simulated in regional or global climate models with moderate to high horizontal resolution (1°–0.25°), and downscaled tracks are obtained using a downscaling technique with large-scale environmental fields from a subset of these models. For both configurations, tracks are objectively separated into four groups using a cluster technique, leading to a zonal and a meridional separation of the tracks. The meridional separation largely captures the separation between deep tropical and subtropical, hybrid or baroclinic cyclones, while the zonal separation segregates Gulf of Mexico and Ca...


Tellus B | 2013

The role of long-lived greenhouse gases as principal LW control knob that governs the global surface temperature for past and future climate change

Andrew A. Lacis; James E. Hansen; Gary L. Russell; Valdar Oinas; Jeffrey Jonas

The climate system of the Earth is endowed with a moderately strong greenhouse effect that is characterised by non-condensing greenhouse gases (GHGs) that provide the core radiative forcing. Of these, the most important is atmospheric CO2. There is a strong feedback contribution to the greenhouse effect by water vapour and clouds that is unique in the solar system, exceeding the core radiative forcing due to the non-condensing GHGs by a factor of three. The significance of the non-condensing GHGs is that once they have been injected into the atmosphere, they remain there virtually indefinitely because they do not condense and precipitate from the atmosphere, their chemical removal time ranging from decades to millennia. Water vapour and clouds have only a short lifespan, with their distribution determined by the locally prevailing meteorological conditions, subject to Clausius–Clapeyron constraint. Although solar irradiance is the ultimate energy source that powers the terrestrial greenhouse effect, there has been no discernable long-term trend in solar irradiance since precise monitoring began in the late 1970s. This leaves atmospheric CO2 as the effective control knob driving the current global warming trend. Over geological time scales, volcanoes are the principal source of atmospheric CO2, and the weathering of rocks is the principal sink, with the biosphere participating as both a source and a sink. The problem at hand is that human industrial activity is causing atmospheric CO2, to increase by 2 ppm yr−1, whereas the interglacial rate has been 0.005 ppm yr−1. This is a geologically unprecedented rate to turn the CO2 climate control knob. This is causing the global warming that threatens the global environment.


Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems | 2016

The tropical rain belts with an annual cycle and a continent model intercomparison project: TRACMIP

Aiko Voigt; Michela Biasutti; Jacob Scheff; Jürgen Bader; Simona Bordoni; Francis Codron; Ross D. Dixon; Jeffrey Jonas; Sarah M. Kang; Nicholas P. Klingaman; Ruby Leung; Jian Lu; Brian E. Mapes; Elizabeth A. Maroon; Sonali McDermid; Jong yeon Park; Romain Roehrig; Brian E. J. Rose; Gary L. Russell; Jeongbin Seo; Thomas Toniazzo; Ho Hsuan Wei; Masakazu Yoshimori; Lucas R. Vargas Zeppetello

This paper introduces the Tropical Rain belts with an Annual cycle and a Continent Model Inter-comparison Project (TRACMIP). TRACMIP studies the dynamics of tropical rain belts and their response to past and future radiative forcings through simulations with 13 comprehensive and one simplified atmosphere models coupled to a slab ocean and driven by seasonally varying insolation. Five idealized experiments, two with an aquaplanet setup and three with a setup with an idealized tropical continent, fill the space between prescribed-SST aquaplanet simulations and realistic simulations provided by CMIP5/6. The simulations reproduce key features of present-day climate and expected future climate change, including an annual-mean intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) that is located north of the equator and Hadley cells and eddy-driven jets that are similar to present-day climate. Quadrupling CO2 leads to a northward ITCZ shift and preferential warming in Northern high latitudes. The simulations show interesting CO2-induced changes in the seasonal excursion of the ITCZ and indicate a possible state dependence of climate sensitivity. The inclusion of an idealized continent modulates both the control climate and the response to increased CO2; for example, it reduces the northward ITCZ shift associated with warming and, in some models, climate sensitivity. In response to eccentricity-driven seasonal insolation changes, seasonal changes in oceanic rainfall are best characterized as a meridional dipole, while seasonal continental rainfall changes tend to be symmetric about the equator. This survey illustrates TRACMIP’s potential to engender a deeper understanding of global and regional climate and to address questions on past and future climate change.


Journal of Climate | 2014

The Impact of Different Absolute Solar Irradiance Values on Current Climate Model Simulations

David Rind; Judith Lean; Jeffrey Jonas

AbstractSimulations of the preindustrial and doubled CO2 climates are made with the GISS Global Climate Middle Atmosphere Model 3 using two different estimates of the absolute solar irradiance value: a higher value measured by solar radiometers in the 1990s and a lower value measured recently by the Solar Radiation and Climate Experiment. Each of the model simulations is adjusted to achieve global energy balance; without this adjustment the difference in irradiance produces a global temperature change of 0.4°C, comparable to the cooling estimated for the Maunder Minimum. The results indicate that by altering cloud cover the model properly compensates for the different absolute solar irradiance values on a global level when simulating both preindustrial and doubled CO2 climates. On a regional level, the preindustrial climate simulations and the patterns of change with doubled CO2 concentrations are again remarkably similar, but there are some differences. Using a higher absolute solar irradiance value and ...


Journal of Climate | 2016

An Assessment of Multimodel Simulations for the Variability of Western North Pacific Tropical Cyclones and Its Association with ENSO

Rongqing Han; Hui Wang; Zeng-Zhen Hu; Arun Kumar; Weijing Li; Lindsey N. Long; Jae-Kyung E. Schemm; Peitao Peng; Wanqiu Wang; Dong Si; Xiaolong Jia; Ming Zhao; Gabriel A. Vecchi; T. E. LaRow; Young-Kwon Lim; Siegfried D. Schubert; Suzana J. Camargo; Naomi Henderson; Jeffrey Jonas; Kevin Walsh

AbstractAn assessment of simulations of the interannual variability of tropical cyclones (TCs) over the western North Pacific (WNP) and its association with El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), as well as a subsequent diagnosis for possible causes of model biases generated from simulated large-scale climate conditions, are documented in the paper. The model experiments are carried out by the Hurricane Work Group under the U.S. Climate Variability and Predictability Research Program (CLIVAR) using five global climate models (GCMs) with a total of 16 ensemble members forced by the observed sea surface temperature and spanning the 28-yr period from 1982 to 2009. The results show GISS and GFDL model ensemble means best simulate the interannual variability of TCs, and the multimodel ensemble mean (MME) follows. Also, the MME has the closest climate mean annual number of WNP TCs and the smallest root-mean-square error to the observation.Most GCMs can simulate the interannual variability of WNP TCs well, with st...

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Hui Wang

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Ming Zhao

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

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Arun Kumar

Indian Institute of Science

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Young-Kwon Lim

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Gary L. Russell

Goddard Institute for Space Studies

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T. E. LaRow

Florida State University

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Kevin Walsh

University of Melbourne

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