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Dive into the research topics where Masaki Satoh is active.

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Featured researches published by Masaki Satoh.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2008

TransCom model simulations of hourly atmospheric CO2: Analysis of synoptic-scale variations for the period 2002-2003

Prabir K. Patra; R. M. Law; Wouter Peters; Christian Rödenbeck; Masayuki Takigawa; C. Aulagnier; Ian T. Baker; D. Bergmann; P. Bousquet; Jørgen Brandt; L. M. P. Bruhwiler; Philip Cameron-Smith; Jesper Christensen; F. Delage; A. S. Denning; S. Fan; Camilla Geels; Sander Houweling; Ryoichi Imasu; Ute Karstens; S. R. Kawa; J. Kleist; M. Krol; S.-J. Lin; R. Lokupitiya; Takashi Maki; Shamil Maksyutov; Yosuke Niwa; R. Onishi; N. Parazoo

The ability to reliably estimate CO2 fluxes from current in situ atmospheric CO2 measurements and future satellite CO2 measurements is dependent on transport model performance at synoptic and shorter timescales. The TransCom continuous experiment was designed to evaluate the performance of forward transport model simulations at hourly, daily, and synoptic timescales, and we focus on the latter two in this paper. Twenty-five transport models or model variants submitted hourly time series of nine predetermined tracers (seven for CO2) at 280 locations. We extracted synoptic-scale variability from daily averaged CO2 time series using a digital filter and analyzed the results by comparing them to atmospheric measurements at 35 locations. The correlations between modeled and observed synoptic CO2 variabilities were almost always largest with zero time lag and statistically significant for most models and most locations. Generally, the model results using diurnally varying land fluxes were closer to the observations compared to those obtained using monthly mean or daily average fluxes, and winter was often better simulated than summer. Model results at higher spatial resolution compared better with observations, mostly because these models were able to sample closer to the measurement site location. The amplitude and correlation of model-data variability is strongly model and season dependent. Overall similarity in modeled synoptic CO2 variability suggests that the first-order transport mechanisms are fairly well parameterized in the models, and no clear distinction was found between the meteorological analyses in capturing the synoptic-scale dynamics.


Science | 2007

A Madden-Julian Oscillation Event Realistically Simulated by a Global Cloud-Resolving Model

Hiroaki Miura; Masaki Satoh; Tomoe Nasuno; Akira Noda; Kazuyoshi Oouchi

A Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) is a massive weather event consisting of deep convection coupled with atmospheric circulation, moving slowly eastward over the Indian and Pacific Oceans. Despite its enormous influence on many weather and climate systems worldwide, it has proven very difficult to simulate an MJO because of assumptions about cumulus clouds in global meteorological models. Using a model that allows direct coupling of the atmospheric circulation and clouds, we successfully simulated the slow eastward migration of an MJO event. Topography, the zonal sea surface temperature gradient, and interplay between eastward- and westward-propagating signals controlled the timing of the eastward transition of the convective center. Our results demonstrate the potential making of month-long MJO predictions when global cloud-resolving models with realistic initial conditions are used.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2015

The EarthCARE Satellite: The Next Step Forward in Global Measurements of Clouds, Aerosols, Precipitation, and Radiation

Anthony J. Illingworth; Howard W. Barker; Anton Beljaars; Marie Ceccaldi; H. Chepfer; Nicolas Clerbaux; Jason N. S. Cole; Julien Delanoë; Carlos Domenech; David P. Donovan; S. Fukuda; Maki Hirakata; Robin J. Hogan; A. Huenerbein; Pavlos Kollias; Takuji Kubota; Teruyuki Nakajima; Takashi Y. Nakajima; Tomoaki Nishizawa; Yuichi Ohno; Hajime Okamoto; Riko Oki; Kaori Sato; Masaki Satoh; Mark W. Shephard; A. Velázquez-Blázquez; Ulla Wandinger; Tobias Wehr; G.-J. van Zadelhoff

AbstractThe collective representation within global models of aerosol, cloud, precipitation, and their radiative properties remains unsatisfactory. They constitute the largest source of uncertainty in predictions of climatic change and hamper the ability of numerical weather prediction models to forecast high-impact weather events. The joint European Space Agency (ESA)–Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) Earth Clouds, Aerosol and Radiation Explorer (EarthCARE) satellite mission, scheduled for launch in 2018, will help to resolve these weaknesses by providing global profiles of cloud, aerosol, precipitation, and associated radiative properties inferred from a combination of measurements made by its collocated active and passive sensors. EarthCARE will improve our understanding of cloud and aerosol processes by extending the invaluable dataset acquired by the A-Train satellites CloudSat, Cloud–Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO), and Aqua. Specifically, EarthCARE’s c...


Journal of Climate | 2009

Diurnal Cycle of Precipitation in the Tropics Simulated in a Global Cloud-Resolving Model

Tomonori Sato; Hiroaki Miura; Masaki Satoh; Yukari N. Takayabu; Yuqing Wang

Abstract This study analyzes the diurnal cycle of precipitation simulated in a global cloud-resolving model (GCRM) named the Nonhydrostatic Icosahedral Atmospheric Model (NICAM). A 30-day integration of NICAM successfully simulates the precipitation diurnal cycle associated with the land–sea breeze and the thermally induced topographic circulations as well as the horizontal propagation of diurnal cycle signals. The first harmonic of the diurnal cycle of precipitation in the 7-km run agrees well with that from satellite observations in its geographical distributions although its amplitude is slightly overestimated. The NICAM simulation revealed that the precipitation diurnal cycle over the Maritime Continent is strongly coupled with the land–sea breeze that controls the convergence/divergence pattern in the lower troposphere around the islands. The analysis also suggests that the cold pool often forms over the open ocean where the precipitation intensity is high, and the propagation of the cold pool events...


Progress in Earth and Planetary Science | 2014

The Non-hydrostatic Icosahedral Atmospheric Model: description and development

Masaki Satoh; Hirofumi Tomita; Hisashi Yashiro; Hiroaki Miura; Chihiro Kodama; Tatsuya Seiki; Akira Noda; Yohei Yamada; Daisuke Goto; Masahiro Sawada; Takemasa Miyoshi; Yosuke Niwa; Masayuki Hara; Tomoki Ohno; Shin-ichi Iga; Takashi Arakawa; Takahiro Inoue; Hiroyasu Kubokawa

This article reviews the development of a global non-hydrostatic model, focusing on the pioneering research of the Non-hydrostatic Icosahedral Atmospheric Model (NICAM). Very high resolution global atmospheric circulation simulations with horizontal mesh spacing of approximately O (km) were conducted using recently developed supercomputers. These types of simulations were conducted with a specifically designed atmospheric global model based on a quasi-uniform grid mesh structure and a non-hydrostatic equation system. This review describes the development of each dynamical and physical component of NICAM, the assimilation strategy and its related models, and provides a scientific overview of NICAM studies conducted to date.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2008

TransCom model simulations of hourly atmospheric CO2 : experimental overview and diurnal cycle results for 2002

R. M. Law; Wouter Peters; Christian Rödenbeck; C. Aulagnier; Ian T. Baker; D. Bergmann; P. Bousquet; Jørgen Brandt; L. M. P. Bruhwiler; Philip Cameron-Smith; Jesper Christensen; F. Delage; A. S. Denning; S. Fan; Camilla Geels; Sander Houweling; Ryoichi Imasu; Ute Karstens; S. R. Kawa; J. Kleist; M. Krol; S.-J. Lin; R. Lokupitiya; Takashi Maki; Shamil Maksyutov; Yosuke Niwa; R. Onishi; N. Parazoo; Prabir K. Patra; G. Pieterse

[1] A forward atmospheric transport modeling experiment has been coordinated by the TransCom group to investigate synoptic and diurnal variations in CO2. Model simulations were run for biospheric, fossil, and air-sea exchange of CO2 and for SF6 and radon for 2000-2003. Twenty-five models or model variants participated in the comparison. Hourly concentration time series were submitted for 280 sites along with vertical profiles, fluxes, and meteorological variables at 100 sites. The submitted results have been analyzed for diurnal variations and are compared with observed CO2 in 2002. Mean summer diurnal cycles vary widely in amplitude across models. The choice of sampling location and model level account for part of the spread suggesting that representation errors in these types of models are potentially large. Despite the model spread, most models simulate the relative variation in diurnal amplitude between sites reasonably well. The modeled diurnal amplitude only shows a weak relationship with vertical resolution across models; differences in near-surface transport simulation appear to play a major role. Examples are also presented where there is evidence that the models show useful skill in simulating seasonal and synoptic changes in diurnal amplitude.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2013

Revolutionizing Climate Modeling with Project Athena: A Multi-Institutional, International Collaboration

James L. Kinter; Benjamin A. Cash; Deepthi Achuthavarier; J. D. Adams; Eric L. Altshuler; P. Dirmeyer; B. Doty; B. Huang; E. K. Jin; Lawrence Marx; Julia V. Manganello; Cristiana Stan; T. Wakefield; T. N. Palmer; M. Hamrud; Thomas Jung; Martin Miller; Peter Towers; Nils P. Wedi; Masaki Satoh; Hiroyuki Tomita; Chihiro Kodama; Tomoe Nasuno; Kazuyoshi Oouchi; Yohei Yamada; Hiroshi Taniguchi; P. Andrews; T. Baer; M. Ezell; C. Halloy

The importance of using dedicated high-end computing resources to enable high spatial resolution in global climate models and advance knowledge of the climate system has been evaluated in an international collaboration called Project Athena. Inspired by the World Modeling Summit of 2008 and made possible by the availability of dedicated high-end computing resources provided by the National Science Foundation from October 2009 through March 2010, Project Athena demonstrated the sensitivity of climate simulations to spatial resolution and to the representation of subgrid-scale processes with horizontal resolutions up to 10 times higher than contemporary climate models. While many aspects of the mean climate were found to be reassuringly similar, beyond a suggested minimum resolution, the magnitudes and structure of regional effects can differ substantially. Project Athena served as a pilot project to demonstrate that an effective international collaboration can be formed to efficiently exploit dedicated sup...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2008

A joint satellite and global cloud‐resolving model analysis of a Madden‐Julian Oscillation event: Model diagnosis

Hirohiko Masunaga; Masaki Satoh; Hiroaki Miura

[1] In this study, a methodology to diagnose a global cloud-resolving model (GCRM) is explored on the basis of a joint analysis with satellite measurements. The Madden-Julian Oscillation experiment carried out with the Nonhydrostatic Icosahedral Atmospheric Model (NICAM) is used as the test bed. The NICAM output is compared with Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) and CloudSat measurements in terms of composite analysis, contoured frequency by altitude diagrams (CFADs), and the joint histogram of cloud top and precipitation top heights. It is found in the composite diagram that the GCRM reproduces a slow, eastward migration of a convective envelope well comparable to the satellite measurement. The GCRM CFAD qualitatively reproduces TRMM and CloudSat CFADs, except that the GCRM tends to overly produce snow in deep convection. The joint histograms reveal that, while the overproduction of snow is evident, NICAM-simulated snow is incapable of producing 94-GHz radar echoes higher than 5 dBZ. This deficiency can be mitigated by a modification to microphysical parameterization in the way that a proportion of small particles is enhanced in the snow mass spectrum.


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2007

Multiscale organization of convection simulated with explicit cloud processes on an aquaplanet

Tomoe Nasuno; Hirofumi Tomita; Shin-ichi Iga; Hiroaki Miura; Masaki Satoh

Abstract This study investigated the multiscale organization of tropical convection on an aquaplanet in a model experiment with a horizontal mesh size of 3.5 km (for a 10-day simulation) and 7 km (for a 40-day simulation). The numerical experiment used the nonhydrostatic icosahedral atmospheric model (NICAM) with explicit cloud physics. The simulation realistically reproduced multiscale cloud systems: eastward-propagating super cloud clusters (SCCs) contained westward-propagating cloud clusters (CCs). SCCs (CCs) had zonal sizes of several thousand (hundred) kilometers; typical propagation speed was 17 (10) m s−1. Smaller convective structures such as mesoscale cloud systems (MCs) of O(10 km) and cloud-scale elements ( 16 km) of O(100 km) area was also reproduced. Planetary-scale equatorial waves (with wavelengths of 10 000 and 40 000 km) had a major influence on the eastward propagation of the simulated SCC; destabilization east of the...


Nature Communications | 2014

Madden–Julian Oscillation prediction skill of a new-generation global model demonstrated using a supercomputer

Tomoki Miyakawa; Masaki Satoh; Hiroaki Miura; Hirofumi Tomita; Hisashi Yashiro; Akira Noda; Yohei Yamada; Chihiro Kodama; Masahide Kimoto; Kunio Yoneyama

Global cloud/cloud system-resolving models are perceived to perform well in the prediction of the Madden–Julian Oscillation (MJO), a huge eastward -propagating atmospheric pulse that dominates intraseasonal variation of the tropics and affects the entire globe. However, owing to model complexity, detailed analysis is limited by computational power. Here we carry out a simulation series using a recently developed supercomputer, which enables the statistical evaluation of the MJO prediction skill of a costly new-generation model in a manner similar to operational forecast models. We estimate the current MJO predictability of the model as 27 days by conducting simulations including all winter MJO cases identified during 2003–2012. The simulated precipitation patterns associated with different MJO phases compare well with observations. An MJO case captured in a recent intensive observation is also well reproduced. Our results reveal that the global cloud-resolving approach is effective in understanding the MJO and in providing month-long tropical forecasts.

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Hirofumi Tomita

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Tomoe Nasuno

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Akira Noda

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Chihiro Kodama

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Shin-ichi Iga

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Tatsuya Seiki

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Kazuyoshi Oouchi

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Hisashi Yashiro

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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