An intercomparison of regional climate simulations for Europe: Assessing uncertainties in model projections

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Standard

An intercomparison of regional climate simulations for Europe : Assessing uncertainties in model projections. / Déqué, M.; Rowell, D. P.; Lüthi, D.; Giorgi, F.; Christensen, J. H.; Rockel, B.; Jacob, D.; Kjellström, E.; De Castro, M.; Van Den Hurk, B.

I: Climatic Change, Bind 81, Nr. SUPPL. 1, 01.05.2007, s. 53-70.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Déqué, M, Rowell, DP, Lüthi, D, Giorgi, F, Christensen, JH, Rockel, B, Jacob, D, Kjellström, E, De Castro, M & Van Den Hurk, B 2007, 'An intercomparison of regional climate simulations for Europe: Assessing uncertainties in model projections', Climatic Change, bind 81, nr. SUPPL. 1, s. 53-70. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-006-9228-x

APA

Déqué, M., Rowell, D. P., Lüthi, D., Giorgi, F., Christensen, J. H., Rockel, B., Jacob, D., Kjellström, E., De Castro, M., & Van Den Hurk, B. (2007). An intercomparison of regional climate simulations for Europe: Assessing uncertainties in model projections. Climatic Change, 81(SUPPL. 1), 53-70. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-006-9228-x

Vancouver

Déqué M, Rowell DP, Lüthi D, Giorgi F, Christensen JH, Rockel B o.a. An intercomparison of regional climate simulations for Europe: Assessing uncertainties in model projections. Climatic Change. 2007 maj 1;81(SUPPL. 1):53-70. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-006-9228-x

Author

Déqué, M. ; Rowell, D. P. ; Lüthi, D. ; Giorgi, F. ; Christensen, J. H. ; Rockel, B. ; Jacob, D. ; Kjellström, E. ; De Castro, M. ; Van Den Hurk, B. / An intercomparison of regional climate simulations for Europe : Assessing uncertainties in model projections. I: Climatic Change. 2007 ; Bind 81, Nr. SUPPL. 1. s. 53-70.

Bibtex

@article{0346afd3d1c8475ca6991c1cf6222b01,
title = "An intercomparison of regional climate simulations for Europe: Assessing uncertainties in model projections",
abstract = "Ten regional climate models (RCM) have been integrated with the standard forcings of the PRUDENCE experiment: IPCC-SRES A2 radiative forcing and Hadley Centre boundary conditions. The response over Europe, calculated as the difference between the 2071-2100 and the 1961-1990 means can be viewed as an expected value about which various uncertainties exist. Uncertainties are measured here by variance in eight sub-European boxes. Four sources of uncertainty can be evaluated with the material provided by the PRUDENCE project. Sampling uncertainty is due to the fact that the model climate is estimated as an average over a finite number of years (30). Model uncertainty is due to the fact that the models use different techniques to discretize the equations and to represent sub-grid effects. Radiative uncertainty is due to the fact that IPCC-SRES A2 is merely one hypothesis. Some RCMs have been run with another scenario of greenhouse gas concentration (IPCC-SRES B2). Boundary uncertainty is due to the fact that the regional models have been run under the constraint of the same global model. Some RCMs have been run with other boundary forcings. The contribution of the different sources varies according to the field, the region and the season, but the role of boundary forcing is generally greater than the role of the RCM, in particular for temperature. Maps of minimum expected 2m temperature and precipitation responses for the IPCC-A2 scenario show that, despite the above mentioned uncertainties, the signal from the PRUDENCE ensemble is significant.",
author = "M. D{\'e}qu{\'e} and Rowell, {D. P.} and D. L{\"u}thi and F. Giorgi and Christensen, {J. H.} and B. Rockel and D. Jacob and E. Kjellstr{\"o}m and {De Castro}, M. and {Van Den Hurk}, B.",
year = "2007",
month = may,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s10584-006-9228-x",
language = "English",
volume = "81",
pages = "53--70",
journal = "Climatic Change",
issn = "0165-0009",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "SUPPL. 1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - An intercomparison of regional climate simulations for Europe

T2 - Assessing uncertainties in model projections

AU - Déqué, M.

AU - Rowell, D. P.

AU - Lüthi, D.

AU - Giorgi, F.

AU - Christensen, J. H.

AU - Rockel, B.

AU - Jacob, D.

AU - Kjellström, E.

AU - De Castro, M.

AU - Van Den Hurk, B.

PY - 2007/5/1

Y1 - 2007/5/1

N2 - Ten regional climate models (RCM) have been integrated with the standard forcings of the PRUDENCE experiment: IPCC-SRES A2 radiative forcing and Hadley Centre boundary conditions. The response over Europe, calculated as the difference between the 2071-2100 and the 1961-1990 means can be viewed as an expected value about which various uncertainties exist. Uncertainties are measured here by variance in eight sub-European boxes. Four sources of uncertainty can be evaluated with the material provided by the PRUDENCE project. Sampling uncertainty is due to the fact that the model climate is estimated as an average over a finite number of years (30). Model uncertainty is due to the fact that the models use different techniques to discretize the equations and to represent sub-grid effects. Radiative uncertainty is due to the fact that IPCC-SRES A2 is merely one hypothesis. Some RCMs have been run with another scenario of greenhouse gas concentration (IPCC-SRES B2). Boundary uncertainty is due to the fact that the regional models have been run under the constraint of the same global model. Some RCMs have been run with other boundary forcings. The contribution of the different sources varies according to the field, the region and the season, but the role of boundary forcing is generally greater than the role of the RCM, in particular for temperature. Maps of minimum expected 2m temperature and precipitation responses for the IPCC-A2 scenario show that, despite the above mentioned uncertainties, the signal from the PRUDENCE ensemble is significant.

AB - Ten regional climate models (RCM) have been integrated with the standard forcings of the PRUDENCE experiment: IPCC-SRES A2 radiative forcing and Hadley Centre boundary conditions. The response over Europe, calculated as the difference between the 2071-2100 and the 1961-1990 means can be viewed as an expected value about which various uncertainties exist. Uncertainties are measured here by variance in eight sub-European boxes. Four sources of uncertainty can be evaluated with the material provided by the PRUDENCE project. Sampling uncertainty is due to the fact that the model climate is estimated as an average over a finite number of years (30). Model uncertainty is due to the fact that the models use different techniques to discretize the equations and to represent sub-grid effects. Radiative uncertainty is due to the fact that IPCC-SRES A2 is merely one hypothesis. Some RCMs have been run with another scenario of greenhouse gas concentration (IPCC-SRES B2). Boundary uncertainty is due to the fact that the regional models have been run under the constraint of the same global model. Some RCMs have been run with other boundary forcings. The contribution of the different sources varies according to the field, the region and the season, but the role of boundary forcing is generally greater than the role of the RCM, in particular for temperature. Maps of minimum expected 2m temperature and precipitation responses for the IPCC-A2 scenario show that, despite the above mentioned uncertainties, the signal from the PRUDENCE ensemble is significant.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33947255673&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/s10584-006-9228-x

DO - 10.1007/s10584-006-9228-x

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:33947255673

VL - 81

SP - 53

EP - 70

JO - Climatic Change

JF - Climatic Change

SN - 0165-0009

IS - SUPPL. 1

ER -

ID: 186941469