Philippe Lucas-Picher
Danish Meteorological Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by Philippe Lucas-Picher.
Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2011
Philippe Lucas-Picher; Jesper Christensen; Fahad Saeed; Pankaj Kumar; Shakeel Asharaf; Bodo Ahrens; Andrew J. Wiltshire; Daniela Jacob; Stefan Hagemann
AbstractThe ability of four regional climate models (RCMs) to represent the Indian monsoon was verified in a consistent framework for the period 1981–2000 using the 45-yr European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) Re-Analysis (ERA-40) as lateral boundary forcing data. During the monsoon period, the RCMs are able to capture the spatial distribution of precipitation with a maximum over the central and west coast of India, but with important biases at the regional scale on the east coast of India in Bangladesh and Myanmar. Most models are too warm in the north of India compared to the observations. This has an impact on the simulated mean sea level pressure from the RCMs, being in general too low compared to ERA-40. Those biases perturb the land–sea temperature and pressure contrasts that drive the monsoon dynamics and, as a consequence, lead to an overestimation of wind speed, especially over the sea. The timing of the monsoon onset of the RCMs is in good agreement with the one obtained from...
Science of The Total Environment | 2013
Pankaj Kumar; Andrew J. Wiltshire; Camilla Mathison; Shakeel Asharaf; Bodo Ahrens; Philippe Lucas-Picher; Jesper Christensen; Andreas Gobiet; Fahad Saeed; Stefan Hagemann; Daniela Jacob
This study presents the possible regional climate change over South Asia with a focus over India as simulated by three very high resolution regional climate models (RCMs). One of the most striking results is a robust increase in monsoon precipitation by the end of the 21st century but regional differences in strength. First the ability of RCMs to simulate the monsoon climate is analyzed. For this purpose all three RCMs are forced with ECMWF reanalysis data for the period 1989-2008 at a horizontal resolution of ~25 km. The results are compared against independent observations. In order to simulate future climate the models are driven by lateral boundary conditions from two global climate models (GCMs: ECHAM5-MPIOM and HadCM3) using the SRES A1B scenario, except for one RCM, which only used data from one GCM. The results are presented for the full transient simulation period 1970-2099 and also for several time slices. The analysis concentrates on precipitation and temperature over land. All models show a clear signal of gradually wide-spread warming throughout the 21st century. The ensemble-mean warming over India is 1.5°C at the end of 2050, whereas it is 3.9°C at the end of century with respect to 1970-1999. The pattern of projected precipitation changes shows considerable spatial variability, with an increase in precipitation over the peninsular of India and coastal areas and, either no change or decrease further inland. From the analysis of a larger ensemble of global climate models using the A1B scenario a wide spread warming (~3.2°C) and an overall increase (~8.5%) in mean monsoon precipitation by the end of the 21st century is very likely. The influence of the driving GCM on the projected precipitation change simulated with each RCM is as strong as the variability among the RCMs driven with one.
Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2013
Philippe Lucas-Picher; Fredrik Boberg; Jesper Christensen; Peter Berg
To retain the sequence of events of a regional climate model (RCM) simulation driven by a reanalysis, a method that has not been widely adopted uses an RCM with frequent reinitializations toward it ...
Archive | 2012
René Laprise; Dragana Kornic; Maja Rapaić; Leo Separovic; Martin Leduc; Oumarou Nikiema; Alejandro Di Luca; Emilia Paula Diaconescu; Adelina Alexandru; Philippe Lucas-Picher; Ramón de Elía; Daniel Caya; Sébastien Biner
The premise of dynamical downscaling is that a high-resolution, nested Regional Climate Model (RCM), driven by large-scale atmospheric fields at its lateral boundary, generates fine scales that are dynamically consistent with the large scales. An RCM is hence expected to act as a kind of magnifying glass that will reveal details that could not be resolved on a coarse mesh. The small scales represent the main potential added value of a high-resolution RCM.
Climate Dynamics | 2013
Philippe Lucas-Picher; Samuel Somot; Michel Déqué; Antoinette Alias
In this study, an ensemble of four multi-year climate simulations is performed with the regional climate model ALADIN to evaluate its ability to simulate the climate over North America in the CORDEX framework. The simulations differ in their driving fields (ERA-40 or ERA-Interim) and the nudging technique (with or without large-scale nudging). The validation of the simulated 2-m temperature and precipitation with observationally-based gridded data sets shows that ALADIN performs similarly to other regional climate models that are commonly used over North America. Large-scale nudging improves the temporal correlation of the atmospheric circulation between ALADIN and its driving field, and also reduces the warm and dry summer biases in central North America. The differences between the simulations driven with different reanalyses are small and are likely related to the regional climate model’s induced internal variability. In general, the impact of different driving fields on ALADIN is smaller than that of large-scale nudging. The analysis of the multi-year simulations over the prairie and the east taiga indicates that the ALADIN 2-m temperature and precipitation interannual variability is similar or larger than that observed. Finally, a comparison of the simulations with observations for the summer 1993 shows that ALADIN underestimates the flood in central North America mainly due to its systematic dry bias in this region. Overall, the results indicate that ALADIN can produce a valuable contribution to CORDEX over North America.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2008
Jesper Christensen; Fredrik Boberg; Ole Bøssing Christensen; Philippe Lucas-Picher
The Cryosphere | 2011
Louise Sandberg Sørensen; Sebastian Bjerregaard Simonsen; Karina Nielsen; Philippe Lucas-Picher; G. Spada; Gudfinna Adalgeirsdottir; René Forsberg; Christine S. Hvidberg
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012
Philippe Lucas-Picher; Maria Wulff‐Nielsen; Jesper Christensen; Guðfinna Aðalgeirsdóttir; Ruth Mottram; Sebastian Bjerregaard Simonsen
Journal of Glaciology | 2014
G. Ađalgeirsdóttir; Andy Aschwanden; Constantine Khroulev; Fredrik Boberg; Ruth Mottram; Philippe Lucas-Picher; Jesper Christensen
Journal of Glaciology | 2013
Sebastian Bjerregaard Simonsen; Lars Stenseng; G. Adalgeirsdottir; Robert S. Fausto; Christine S. Hvidberg; Philippe Lucas-Picher