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Featured researches published by R. A. Stratton.


Geoscientific Model Development Discussions | 2011

The Met Office Unified Model Global Atmosphere 6.0/6.1 and JULES Global Land 6.0/6.1 configurations

D. N. Walters; M. J. Best; A. C. Bushell; D. Copsey; John M. Edwards; Pete Falloon; Chris Harris; A. P. Lock; James Manners; Cyril J. Morcrette; Malcolm J. Roberts; R. A. Stratton; S. Webster; J. M. Wilkinson; M. R. Willett; I. A. Boutle; P. D. Earnshaw; Peter G. Hill; C. MacLachlan; G. M. Martin; W. Moufouma-Okia; M. D. Palmer; Jon Petch; G. G. Rooney; Adam A. Scaife; Keith D. Williams

We describe Global Atmosphere 6.0 and Global Land 6.0 (GA6.0/GL6.0): the latest science configurations of the Met Office Unified Model and JULES (Joint UK Land Environment Simulator) land surface model developed for use across all timescales. Global Atmosphere 6.0 includes the ENDGame (Even Newer Dynamics for General atmospheric modelling of the environment) dynamical core, which significantly increases mid-latitude variability improving a known model bias. Alongside developments of the model’s physical parametrisations, ENDGame also increases variability in the tropics, which leads to an improved representation of tropical cyclones and other tropical phenomena. Further developments of the atmospheric and land surface parametrisations improve other aspects of model performance, including the forecasting of surface weather phenomena. We also describe GA6.1/GL6.1, which includes a small number of long-standing differences from our main trunk configurations that we continue to require for operational global weather prediction. Since July 2014, GA6.1/GL6.1 has been used by the Met Office for operational global numerical weather prediction, whilst GA6.0/GL6.0 was implemented in its remaining global prediction systems over the following year. Copyright statement. The works published in this journal are distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. This license does not affect the Crown copyright work, which is re-usable under the Open Government Licence (OGL). The Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License and the OGL are interoperable and do not conflict with, reduce or limit each other.


Journal of Climate | 2006

The Physical Properties of the Atmosphere in the New Hadley Centre Global Environmental Model (HadGEM1). Part II: Aspects of Variability and Regional Climate

M. A. Ringer; G. M. Martin; C. Z. Greeves; Tim Hinton; P. M. James; V. D. Pope; Adam A. Scaife; R. A. Stratton; Peter M. Inness; Julia Slingo; Gui-Ying Yang

Abstract The performance of the atmospheric component of the new Hadley Centre Global Environmental Model (HadGEM1) is assessed in terms of its ability to represent a selection of key aspects of variability in the Tropics and extratropics. These include midlatitude storm tracks and blocking activity, synoptic variability over Europe, and the North Atlantic Oscillation together with tropical convection, the Madden–Julian oscillation, and the Asian summer monsoon. Comparisons with the previous model, the Third Hadley Centre Coupled Ocean–Atmosphere GCM (HadCM3), demonstrate that there has been a considerable increase in the transient eddy kinetic energy (EKE), bringing HadGEM1 into closer agreement with current reanalyses. This increase in EKE results from the increased horizontal resolution and, in combination with the improved physical parameterizations, leads to improvements in the representation of Northern Hemisphere storm tracks and blocking. The simulation of synoptic weather regimes over Europe is a...


NCAR Technical Report | 2012

The APE atlas

David L. Williamson; Michael Blackburn; Brian J. Hoskins; Kensuke Nakajima; Wataru Ohfuchi; Yasuto Takahashi; Yoshi-Yuki Hayashi; Hisashi Nakamura; Masaki Ishiwatari; John L. McGregor; Volkmar Wirth; Helmut Frank; P. Bechthold; Nils P. Wedi; Hirofumi Tomita; Masaki Satoh; Ming Zhao; Isaac M. Held; Max J. Suarez; Myong-In Lee; Masahiro Watanabe; Masahide Kimoto; Yimin Liu; Zaizhi Wang; Andrea Molod; Kavirajan Rajendran; Akio Kitoh; R. A. Stratton

This Atlas presents statistical analyses of the simulations submitted to the Aqua-Planet Experiment (APE) data archive. The simulations are from global Atmospheric General Circulation Models (AGCM) applied to a water-covered earth. The AGCMs include ones actively used or being developed for numerical weather prediction or climate research. Some are mature, application models and others are more novel and thus less well tested in Earth-like applications. The experiment applies AGCMs with their complete parameterization package to an idealization of the planet Earth which has a greatly simplified lower boundary that consists of an ocean only. It has no land and its associated orography, and no sea ice. The ocean is represented by Sea Surface Temperatures (SST) which are specified everywhere with simple, idealized distributions. Thus in the hierarchy of tests available for AGCMs, APE falls between tests with simplified forcings such as those proposed by Held and Suarez (1994) and Boer and Denis (1997) and Earth-like simulations of the Atmospheric Modeling Intercomparison Project (AMIP, Gates et al., 1999). Blackburn and Hoskins (2013) summarize the APE and its aims. They discuss where the APE fits within a modeling hierarchy which has evolved to evaluate complete models and which provides a link between realistic simulation and conceptual models of atmospheric phenomena. The APE bridges a gap in the existing hierarchy. The goals of APE are to provide a benchmark of current model behaviors and to stimulate research to understand the cause of inter-model differences., APE is sponsored by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) joint Commission on Atmospheric Science (CAS), World Climate Research Program (WCRP) Working Group on Numerical Experimentation (WGNE). Chapter 2 of this Atlas provides an overview of the specification of the eight APE experiments and of the data collected. Chapter 3 lists the participating models and includes brief descriptions of each. Chapters 4 through 7 present a wide variety of statistics from the 14 participating models for the eight different experiments. Additional intercomparison figures created by Dr. Yukiko Yamada in AGU group are available at http://www.gfd-dennou.org/library/ape/comparison/. This Atlas is intended to present and compare the statistics of the APE simulations but does not contain a discussion of interpretive analyses. Such analyses are left for journal papers such as those included in the Special Issue of the Journal of the Meteorological Society of Japan (2013, Vol. 91A) devoted to the APE. Two papers in that collection provide an overview of the simulations. One (Blackburn et al., 2013) concentrates on the CONTROL simulation and the other (Williamson et al., 2013) on the response to changes in the meridional SST profile. Additional papers provide more detailed analysis of the basic simulations, while others describe various sensitivities and applications. The APE experiment data base holds a wealth of data that is now publicly available from the APE web site: http://climate.ncas.ac.uk/ape/. We hope that this Atlas will stimulate future analyses and investigations to understand the large variation seen in the model behaviors.


Journal of Climate | 2018

A pan-Africa convection-permitting regional climate simulation with the Met Office Unified Model: CP4-Africa

R. A. Stratton; C. A. Senior; S. B. Vosper; Sonja S. Folwell; Ian A. Boutle; Paul D. Earnshaw; Elizabeth J. Kendon; A. P. Lock; Andrew Malcolm; James Manners; Cyril J. Morcrette; Christopher Short; Alison Stirling; Christopher M. Taylor; Simon Tucker; Stuart Webster; Jonathan M. Wilkinson

AbstractA convection-permitting multiyear regional climate simulation using the Met Office Unified Model has been run for the first time on an Africa-wide domain. The model has been run as part of the Future Climate for Africa (FCFA) Improving Model Processes for African Climate (IMPALA) project, and its configuration, domain, and forcing data are described here in detail. The model [Pan-African Convection-Permitting Regional Climate Simulation with the Met Office UM (CP4-Africa)] uses a 4.5-km horizontal grid spacing at the equator and is run without a convection parameterization, nested within a global atmospheric model driven by observations at the sea surface, which does include a convection scheme. An additional regional simulation, with identical resolution and physical parameterizations to the global model, but with the domain, land surface, and aerosol climatologies of CP4-Africa, has been run to aid in the understanding of the differences between the CP4-Africa and global model, in particular to ...


Climate Dynamics | 2000

The impact of new physical parametrizations in the Hadley Centre climate model: HadAM3

V. D. Pope; M. L. Gallani; P. R. Rowntree; R. A. Stratton


Climate Dynamics | 2002

The processes governing horizontal resolution sensitivity in a climate model

V. D. Pope; R. A. Stratton


Climate Dynamics | 1999

A high resolution AMIP integration using the Hadley Centre model HadAM2b

R. A. Stratton


Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2011

Adaptive detrainment in a convective parametrization

S. H. Derbyshire; A. V. Maidens; S. F. Milton; R. A. Stratton; Martin Willett


Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2012

Improving the diurnal cycle of convection in GCMs

R. A. Stratton; Alison Stirling


Journal of The Meteorological Society of Japan | 2013

The Aqua-Planet Experiment (APE): CONTROL SST Simulation

Michael Blackburn; David L. Williamson; Kensuke Nakajima; Wataru Ohfuchi; Yoshiyuki O. Takahashi; Yoshi-Yuki Hayashi; Hisashi Nakamura; Masaki Ishiwatari; John L. McGregor; Volkmar Wirth; Helmut Frank; Peter Bechtold; Nils P. Wedi; Hirofumi Tomita; Masaki Satoh; Ming Zhao; Isaac M. Held; Max J. Suarez; Myong-In Lee; Masahiro Watanabe; Masahide Kimoto; Yimin Liu; Zaizhi Wang; Andrea Molod; Kavirajan Rajendran; Akio Kitoh; R. A. Stratton

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Nils P. Wedi

European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts

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Andrea Molod

Goddard Space Flight Center

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David L. Williamson

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Isaac M. Held

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

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Max J. Suarez

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Ming Zhao

Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory

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Yoshi-Yuki Hayashi

Planetary Science Institute

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