[2006 ], [2005 ], [2004 ], [2003 ], [2002 ], [2001 ], [2000 ], [1999 ], [1998 ], [1996 ] [.... ],
2006
Résumé. - Une étude de cas concernant la caractérisation en régime
dynamique d'un composant solaire de bâtiment nous a permis d'aborder
le problème général que soulève l'identification d'un modèle physique,
non linéaire, à nombre élevé de paramètres libres (ici dix). Le point de
vue retenu est que le modèle à construire et
à déterminer a trois objectifs couplés : apporter au concepteur une
compréhension suffisante du fonctionnement du composant afin de guider
ses tentatives d'améliorations, autoriser son intégration dans
un système plus vaste (modèle de bâtiment et d'organes de commande)
afin d'éprouver ses performances en situation réelle, et enfin guider
le choix de séquences expérimentales pour répondre aux mieux aux deux
objectifs précédents (cohérence globale). On décrit la méthode, sa
mise en oeuvre, et on donne les résultats obtenus en mettant en
évidence la cohérence explicite qui est établie entre la phase
expérimentale - effectuée dans un contexte de normalisation par un
centre technique - et la détermination proprement dite des grandeurs
physiques du modèle. Contrairement aux méthodes classiques de mesure
pour lesquelles on peut concevoir des expériences découplant
chacun des paramètres, la procédure choisie identifie d'un coup
l'ensemble des paramètres libres sur l'ensemble des données
expérimentales (identification inclusive). Un accent particulier
est mis sur l'analyse des erreurs de mesure dont l'importance est
manifeste, non seulement pour déterminer la précision du modèle
obtenu, mais également pour utiliser correctement l'ensemble de
l'information expérimentale pour la phase d'identification proprement
dite.
2005
Krinner, G., O. Magand, I. Simmonds, C. Genthon, and J.-L. Dufresne.
Clim. Dyn. , DOI: 10.1007/s00382-006-0177-x, 2006.
Abstract :
The aim of this work is to assess potential future Antarctic surface mass balance changes,
the underlying mechanisms, and the impact of these changes on global sea level. To this
aim, this paper presents simulations of the Antarctic climate for the end of the 20th and 21st
centuries. The simulations were carried out with a stretched-grid atmospheric general
circulation model, allowing for high horizontal resolution (60 km) over Antarctica. It is found
that the simulated present-day surface mass balance is good on continental scales. Errors
on regional scales are moderate when observed sea surface conditions are used; more
significant regional biases appear when sea surface conditions from a coupled model run
are prescribed. The simulated Antarctic surface mass balance increases by 32 mm water
equivalent per year in the next century, corresponding to a sea level decrease of 1.2 mm yr-1
by the end of the 21st century. This surface mass balance increase is largely due to
precipitation changes, while changes in snow melt and turbulent latent surface fluxes are
weak. The temperature increase leads to an increased moisture transport towards the
interior of the continent because of the higher moisture holding capacity of warmer air, but
changes in atmospheric dynamics, in particular off the Antarctic coast, regionally modulate
this signal.
Texte in
pdf .
Hourdin, F., I. Musat, S. Bony, P. Braconnot, F. Codron, J.-L. Dufresne,
L. Fairhead, M.-A. Filiberti, P. Friedlingstein, J.-Y. Grandpeix, G.
Krinner, P. LeVan, Z.-X. Li and F. Lott.
Climate Dynamics , Vol. 19, No. 15, pages 3445-3482, August 2006
Abstract :
The LMDZ4 general circulation model is the atmospheric component of
the IPSL-CM4 coupled model which has been used to perform climate
change simulations for the 4th IPCC assessment report. The main
aspects of the model climatology (forced by observed sea surface
temperature) are documented here, as well as the major improvements
with respect to the previous versions, which mainly come form the
parametrization of tropical convection. A methodology is proposed to
help analyse the sensitivity of the tropical Hadley- Walker
circulation to the parametrization of cumulus convection and
clouds. The tropical circulation is characterized using scalar
potentials associated with the horizontal wind and horizontal
transport of geopotential (the Laplacian of which is proportional to
the total vertical momentum in the atmospheric column). The effect of
parametrized physics is analysed in a regime sorted framework using
the vertical velocity at 500 hPa as a proxy for large scale vertical
motion. Compared to Tiedtke s convection scheme, used in previous
versions, the Emanuel s scheme improves the representation of the
Hadley-Walker circulation, with a relatively stronger and deeper large
scale vertical ascent over tropical continents, and suppresses the
marked patterns of concentrated rainfall over oceans. Thanks to the
regime sorted analyses, this differences are attributed to intrinsic
differences in the vertical distribution of convective heating, and to
the lack of self-inhibition by precipitating downdraughts in Tiedtke s
parametrization. Both the convection and cloud schemes are shown to
control the relative importance of large scale convection over land
and ocean, an important point for the behaviour of the coupled model.
Texte in pdf .
W. D. Collins, V. Ramaswamy, M. D. Schwarzkopf, Y. Sun, R. W. Portmann, Q. Fu, S. E. B. Casanova, J.-L. Dufresne, D. W. Fillmore, P. M. D. Forster, V. Y. Galin, L. K. Gohar, W. J. Ingram, D. P. Kratz, M.-P. Lefebvre, J. Li, P. Marquet, V. Oinas, Y. Tsushima, T. Uchiyama, and W. Y. Zhong
J. Geophys. Res. - Atmospheres , Vol. 111, D14317, doi:10.1029/2005JD006713, August 2006
Abstract :
The radiative effects from increased concentrations of well-mixed greenhouse gases (WMGHGs) represent the most significant and best understood anthropogenic forcing of the climate system. The most comprehensive tools for simulating past and future climates influenced by WMGHGs are fully coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models (AOGCMs). Because of the importance of WMGHGs as forcing agents it is essential that AOGCMs compute the radiative forcing by these gases as accurately as possible. We present the results of a radiative transfer model intercomparison between the forcings computed by the radiative parameterizations of AOGCMs and by benchmark line-by-line (LBL) codes. The comparison is focused on forcing by CO2, CH4, N2O, CFC-11, CFC-12, and the increased H2O expected in warmer climates. The models included in the intercomparison include several LBL codes and most of the global models submitted to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fourth Assessment Report (AR4). In general, the LBL models are in excellent agreement with each other. However, in many cases, there are substantial discrepancies among the AOGCMs and between the AOGCMs and LBL codes. In some cases this is because the AOGCMs neglect particular absorbers, in particular the near-infrared effects of CH4 and N2O, while in others it is due to the methods for modeling the radiative processes. The biases in the AOGCM forcings are generally largest at the surface level. We quantify these differences and discuss the implications for interpreting variations in forcing and response across the multimodel ensemble of AOGCM simulations assembled for the IPCC AR4.
Texte in pdf .
"© American Geophysical
Union. Further reproduction or electronic distribution is not permitted."
(Jean-Baptiste Joseph Fourier and the discovery of the greenhouse effect.)
J.-L. Dufresne
La météorologie , N. 53, pp. 42-46, mai 2006.
Abstract : Joseph Fourier is well known for his
mathematical studies and for his work on heat diffusion. Fourier
series, Fourier coefficients, Fourier integrals, Fourier analysis,
Fourier equation are common expressions. Fourier most popular work is
probably the "analytical theory of heat". Here we present the
important contribution of J. Fourier to the Earth and space sciences
by analysing his "memoir on the temperature of the Earth and planetary
spaces".
Résumé
Joseph Fourier est bien connu pour ses travaux mathématiques et pour
ceux sur la diffusion de la chaleur. On parle de séries de Fourier, de
coefficients de Fourier, d'intégrales de Fourier, d'analyse de
Fourier, d'équation de Fourier. Son oeuvre probablement la plus connue
est la «Théorie analytique de la chaleur». Ici nous présentons
l'importante contribution de J. Fourier aux sciences de l'univers à
travers l'analyse de son «mémoire sur les températures du globe
terrestre et des espaces planétaires.»
Texte en pdf .
S. Bony , R. Colman, V.M. Kattsov, R.P. Allan, C.S. Bretherton,
J.-L. Dufresne, A. Hall, S. Hallegatte, M.M. Holland, W. Ingram,
D.A. Randall, B.J. Soden, G. Tselioudis, M.J. Webb
J. of Clim., to be published.
Abstract :
Processes in the climate system that can either amplify or damp the
climate response to an external perturbation are referred to as
climate feedbacks. Climate sensitivity estimates depend critically on
radiative feedbacks associated with water vapor, lapse-rate, clouds,
snow and sea-ice, and global estimates of these feedbacks differ among
general circulation models. By reviewing recent observational,
numerical and theoretical studies, this paper shows that there has
been progress since the Third Assessment Report of the
Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change in (i) the understanding of
the physical mechanisms involved in these feedbacks, (ii) the
interpretation of inter-model differences in global estimates of these
feedbacks, and (iii) the development of methodologies of evaluation of
these feedbacks (or of some components) using observations. This
suggests that continuing developments in climate feedback research
will progressively get us to the point where it will be possible to
constrain the GCMs range of climate feedbacks and climate sensitivity
through an ensemble of diagnostics based on physical understanding and
observations.
Abstract
or texte in
pdf .
"© American Meteorological Society."
2004
Bony, S. , J-L Dufresne;
Geophys. Res. Lett., Vol. 32, No. 20, L20806, doi: 10.1029/2005GL023851, Oct. 2005.
Abstract :
The radiative response of tropical clouds to global warming exhibits a
large spread among climate models, and this constitutes a major source
of uncertainty for climate sensitivity estimates. To better interpret
the origin of that uncertainty, we analyze the sensitivity of the
tropical cloud radiative forcing to a change in sea surface
temperature that is simulated by 15 coupled models simulating climate
change and current interannual variability. We show that it is in
regimes of large-scale subsidence that the model results (1) differ
the most in climate change and (2) disagree the most with observations
in the current climate (most models underestimate the interannual
sensitivity of clouds albedo to a change in temperature). This
suggests that the simulation of the sensitivity of marine boundary
layer clouds to changing environmental conditions constitutes,
currently, the main source of uncertainty in tropical cloud feedbacks
simulated by general circulation models.
Texte in
pdf .
"©
American Geophysical Union. Further reproduction or electronic
distribution is not permitted."
Jean-Louis Dufresne, Johannes Quaas, Olivier Boucher, Sébastien Denvil, Laurent Fairhead
Geophys. Res. Lett.,
Vol. 32, No. 21, L21703, doi: 10.1029/2005GL023619, Nov. 2005.
Abstract :
In this study, we examine the time evolution of the relative
contribution of sulfate aerosols and greenhouse gases to anthropogenic
climate change. We use the new IPSL-CM4 coupled climate model for
which the first indirect effect of sulfate aerosols has been
calibrated using POLDER satellite data. For the recent historical
period the sulfate aerosols play a key role on the temperature
increase with a cooling effect of 0.5K, to be compared to the 1.4K
warming due to greenhouse gas increase. In contrast, the projected
temperature change for the 21st century is remarkably independent of
the effects of anthropogenic sulfate aerosols for the SRES-A2
scenario. Those results are interpreted comparing the different
radiative forcings, and can be extended to other scenarios. We also
highlight that the first indirect effect of aerosol strongly depends
on the land surface model by changing the cloud cover.
Texte (pdf) in
with color figures or black and white olny
"©
American Geophysical Union. Further reproduction or electronic
distribution is not permitted."
Jean-Louis Dufresne, Richard Fournier, Christophe Hourdin, Frédéric Hourdin
to be published in Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences,, 2005.
Abstract :
The Net Exchange Formulation (NEF) is an alternative to the usual
radiative transfer formulation. It was proposed by two authors in 1967,
but until now, this formulation has been used only in a very few cases
for atmospheric studies. The aim of this paper is to present the NEF
and its main advantages, and to illustrate them in the case of
planet Mars.
In the NEF, the radiative fluxes are no more considered. The basic
variables are the net exchange rates between each pair of atmospheric
layers i,j. NEF offers a meaningful matrix representation of
radiative exchanges, allows to quantify the dominant contributions to
the local heating rates and provides a general framework to develop
approximations satisfying reciprocity of radiative transfer as well as
first and second principle of thermodynamic. This may be very useful
to develop fast radiative codes for GCMs.
We present a radiative code developed along those lines for a GCM of
Mars. We show that computing the most important optical exchange
factors at each time step and the others exchange factors only a few
times a day strongly reduces the CPU time without any significant
precision lost. With this solution, the CPU time increases
proportionally to the number N of the vertical layers and no more
proportionally to its square N^2. We also investigate some specific
points such as numerical instabilities that may appear in the high
atmosphere and errors that may be introduced if inappropriate
treatments are performed when reflection at the surface occurs.
Masaru Yoshioka, Natalie Mahowald, Jean-Louis Dufresne, and Chao Luo
J. Geophys. Res. - Atmospheres , 110, D18S17, doi:10.1029/2004JD005276, June 2005.
Abstract :
It has been speculated that the vegetation change and human land use
have modulated the dust sources in North Africa and contributed to the
observed increase of dust since 1960s. However, the roles of such
surface disturbances on dust generation are not well constrained due
to limitations in the available data and models. This study addresses
this issue by simulating the Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS)
Absorbing Aerosol Indices (AAIs) for model predicted dust and
comparing them with the observations. Model simulations are conducted
for natural topographic depression sources with and without adding
sources due to vegetation change and cultivation over North Africa.
The simulated AAIs capture the previously reported properties of TOMS
AAI as well as observed magnitude and spatial distribution reasonably
well, although there are some important disagreements with
observations. Statistical analyses of spatial and temporal patterns
of simulated AAI suggest that simulations using only the natural
topographic source capture the observed patterns better than those
using 50% of surface disturbance sources. The AAI gradients between
Sahara (north) and Sahel (south) suggests the best mixture of surface
disturbance sources are 20-25%, while spatial and temporal
correlations suggests the optimum mixture of 0-15% with the upper
bound of 25-40%. However, sensitivity studies show that uncertainties
associated with meteorology and source parameterization are large and
may undermine the findings derived from the simulations. Such
uncertainties in the model simulations need to be reduced in order to
constrain the roles of different types of dust sources better using
AAI simulation.
Texte in (pdf) .
"©
American Geophysical Union. Further reproduction or electronic
distribution is not permitted."
M. S. Reddy, O. Boucher, N. Bellouin, M. Schulz, Y. Balkanski, J-L Dufresne, and M. Pham
Journal of GeophysicalResearch - Atmospheres , 110, D10S16, doi:10.1029/2004JD004757, April 2005.
Abstract :
The global cycle of multicomponent aerosols including sulfate, black
carbon (BC), organic matter (OM), mineral dust, and sea salt is
simulated in the Laboratoire de Me´te´orologie Dynamique general
circulation model (LMDZT GCM). The seasonal open biomass burning
emissions for simulation years 2000-2001 are scaled from
climatological emissions in proportion to satellite detected fire
counts. The emissions of dust and sea salt are parameterized online in
the model. The comparison of model-predicted monthly mean aerosol
optical depth (AOD) at 500 nm with Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET)
shows good agreement with a correlation coefficient of 0.57(N = 1324)
and 76% of data points falling within a factor of 2 deviation. The
correlation coefficient for daily mean values drops to 0.49 (N =
23,680). The absorption AOD (tau at 670 nm) estimated in the model is
poorly correlated with measurements (r = 0.27, N = 349). It is biased
low by 24% as compared to AERONET. The model reproduces the prominent
features in the monthly mean AOD retrievals from Moderate Resolution
Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). The agreement between the model and
MODIS is better over source and outflow regions (i.e., within a factor
of 2). There is an underestimation of the model by up to a factor of 3
to 5 over some remote oceans. The largest contribution to global
annual average AOD (0.12 at 550 nm) is from sulfate (0.043 or 35%),
followed by sea salt (0.027 or 23%), dust (0.026 or 22%), OM (0.021 or
17%), and BC (0.004 or 3%). The atmospheric aerosol absorption is
predominantly contributed by BC and is about 3% of the total AOD. The
globally and annually averaged shortwave (SW) direct aerosol radiative
perturbation (DARP) in clear-sky conditions is -2.17 W^2 and is about
a factor of 2 larger than in all-sky conditions ( 1.04 W^2 ). The net
DARP (SW + LW) by all aerosols is -1.46 and -0.59 W^2 in clear- and
all-sky conditions, respectively. Use of realistic, less absorbing in
SW, optical properties for dust results in negative forcing over the
dust-dominated regions.
Texte in pdf .
"© American Geophysical
Union. Further reproduction or electronic distribution is not permitted."
M. Haeffelin, L. Barthes, O. Bock, C. Boitel, S. Bony, D. Bouniol, H. Chepfer, M. Chiriaco, J. Cuesta, J. Delanoe, P. Drobinski, J.-L. Dufresne, C. Flamant, M. Grall, A. Hodzic, F. Hourdin, F. Lapouge, Y. Lemaitre, A. Mathieu, Y. Morille, C. Naud, V. Noel, W. O Hirok, J. Pelon, C. Pietras, A. Protat, B. Romand, G. Scialom, and R. Vautard.
to be published in Annales Geophysicae, 2005.
Abstract :
Ground-based remote sensing observatories have a crucial role to play
in providing data to improve our understanding of atmospheric
processes, to test the performance of atmospheric models, and to
develop new methods for future space-borne observations. Institut
Pierre Simon Laplace, a French research institute in environmental
sciences, created the Site Instrumental de Recherche par T&eactue;l&eactue;d&eactue;tection Atmosph&eactue;rique (SIRTA), an atmospheric observatory with
these goals in mind. Today SIRTA, located 20 km south of Paris,
operates a suite a state-of-the-art active and passive remote sensing
instruments dedicated to routine monitoring of cloud and aerosol
properties, and key atmospheric parameters. Detailed description of
the state of the atmospheric column is progressively archived and made
accessible to the scientific community. This paper describes the SIRTA
infrastructure and database, and provides an overview of the
scientific research associated with the observatory. Researchers
using SIRTA data conduct research on atmospheric processes involving
complex interactions between clouds, aerosols and radiative and
dynamic processes in the atmospheric column. Atmospheric modellers
working with SIRTA observations develop new methods to test their
models and innovative analyses to improve parametric representations
of sub-grid processes that must be accounted for in the model. SIRTA
provides the means to develop data interpretation tools for future
active remote sensing missions in space (e.g. CloudSat and
CALIPSO). SIRTA observation and research activities take place in
networks of atmospheric observatories that allow scientists to access
consistent data sets from diverse regions on the globe.
Texte in (pdf)
V. Eymet, R. Fournier, S. Blanco, J.L. Dufresne
Journal of Quantitative Spectroscopy and Radiative Transfer
Volume 91, Issue 1 , 15 February 2005, Pages 27-46
Abstract :
A boundary-based net-exchange Monte Carlo method was introduced (JQSRT
74 (2001) 563) that allows to bypass the difficulties encountered by
standard Monte Carlo algorithms in the limit of optically thick
absorption (and/or for quasi-isothermal configurations). With the
present paper, this method is extended to scattering
media. Developments are fully 3D, but illustrations are presented for
plane parallel configuration. Compared to standard Monte Carlo
algorithms, convergence qualities have been improved over a wide range
of absorption and scattering optical thicknesses. The proposed
algorithm still encounters a convergence difficulty in the case of
optically thick, highly scattering media.
Texte in (pdf)
"© Elsevier Science."
2003
Johannes Quaas, Olivier Boucher, Jean-Louis Dufresne, Hervé Le Treut
Climate Dynamics, doi:10.1007/s00382-004-0475-0, Volume 23,
Numbers 7-8, pp. 779-789, December 2004.
Abstract :
Among anthropogenic perturbations of the Earth's atmosphere,
greenhouse gases and aerosols are considered to have a major impact on
the energy budget through their impact on radiative fluxes. We use
three ensembles of simulations with the LMDZ general circulation model
to investigate the radiative impacts of five species of greenhouse
gases (CO2, CH4, N2O, CFC-11 and CFC-12) and sulfate aerosols for the
period 1930-1989. Since our focus is on the atmospheric changes in
clouds and radiation from greenhouse gases and aerosols, we prescribed
sea surface temperatures in these simulations. Besides the direct
impact on radiation through the greenhouse effect and scattering of
sunlight by aerosols, strong radiative impacts of both perturbations
through changes in cloudiness are analysed. The increase in greenhouse
gas concentration leads to a reduction of clouds at all atmospheric
levels, thus decreasing the total greenhouse effect in the longwave
spectrum and increasing absorption of solar radiation by reduction of
cloud albedo. Increasing anthropogenic aerosol burden results in a
decrease in high-level cloud cover through a cooling of the
atmosphere, and an increase in the low-level cloud cover through the
second aerosol indirect effect. The trend in low-level cloud lifetime
due to aerosols is quantified to 0.5 min day-1 decade-1 for the
simulation period. The different changes in high (decrease) and
low-level (increase) cloudiness due to the response of cloud processes
to aerosols impact shortwave radiation in a contrariwise manner, and
the net effect is slightly positive. The total aerosol effect
including also the aerosol direct and first indirect effects remains
strongly negative.
V. Eymet, J.L. Dufresne, P. Ricchiazzi, R. Fournier, and S. Blanco
Atmospheric Research, Volume 72, Issues 1-4, Pages 239-261 2004, November-December 2004.
Abstract :
The Net Exchange Formulation (NEF) is an alternative to the usual
radiative transfer equation. It was proposed in 1967 by Green for
atmospheric sciences and by Hottel for engineering sciences. Until
now, the NEF has been used only in a very few cases for atmospheric
studies. Recently we have developped a longwave radiative code based
on this formulation for a GCM of the Mars planet. Here, we will
present results for the Earth atmosphere, obtained with a Monte Carlo
Method based on the NEF. In this method, fluxes are not addressed any
more. The basic variables are the net exchange rates (NER) between
each pair of atmospheric layer (i,j), i.e. the radiative power emitted
by i and absorbed by j minus the radiative power emitted by j and
absorbed by i. The graphical representation of the NER matrix
highlights the radiative exchanges that dominate the radiative budget
of the atmosphere and allows one to have a very good insight of the
radiative exchanges. Results will be presented for clear sky
atmospheres with Mid-Latitude Summer and Sub-Arctic Winter temperature
profiles, and for the same atmospheres with three different types of
clouds. The effect of scattering on longwave radiative exchanges will
also be analysed.
Texte in (pdf)
"© Elsevier Science."
L. Bopp, O. Boucher, O. Aumont, S. Belviso, J-L Dufresne, P. Montfray, M. Pham
Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences,,
Vol. 61, No. 5, pp. 826-835, May 2004
Abstract :
Dimethylsulfide (DMS) is the most abundant volatile sulfur compound at
the sea surface and has a strong marine phytoplanktonic origin. Once
outgased in the atmosphere, it is oxidized and contributes to form
sulfate aerosol particles that affect the radiative budget as
precursors of cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). More than 15 years ago,
Charlson et al. (1987) have postulated that climate may be partly
modulated by variations in DMS production. We test this hypothesis in
the context of anthropogenic climate change and present here a first
modeled estimate of the radiative impact due to changes in DMS air-sea
fluxes caused by global warming. Following previous work on modeling
the marine DMS response to climate change (Bopp et al. 2003), we use
an atmospheric model of the global sulfur cycle to simulate the
responses of DMS sea-to-air flux and its associated radiative impact
to increased greenhouse gas concentration (a 1 % increase per year in
atmospheric CO2 until the present-day concentration has doubled). At
2xCO, our model estimates a small increase (3 %) in the global DMS
flux to the atmosphere but with large spatial heterogeneities (from
-15 % to 30 % in the zonal mean). The radiative perturbation due to
the DMS-induced change in cloud albedo is estimated to be -0.05 W.m-2,
which represents only a small negative climate feedback on global
warming. However there are large regional changes, such as a
perturbation of up to -1.5 W.m-2 in summer between 40°S and 50°S,
which can significantly impact the regional climate. In the Southern
Ocean, the radiative impact due to changes in the DMS cycle may partly
alleviate the radiative forcing due to anthropogenic CO2 (which is
estimated between +2.5 and +3 W.m-2 at 2xCO2 compared to 1xCO2
conditions).
Keywords: dimethylsulfide, global warming, radiative impact
S. Bony, J-L Dufresne, H. Le Treut, J-J Morcrette, and C. Senior,
Climate Dynamics, , DOI: 10.1007/s00382-003-0369-6,
Vol. 22, No. 2-3, pp.71-86, March 2004
Abstract :
Clouds are sensitive to changes in both the large-scale circulation
and the thermodynamic structure of the atmosphere. In the Tropics,
temperature changes that occur on seasonal to decadal timescales are
often associated with circulation changes. Therefore, it is difficult
to determine the part of cloud variations that results from a change
in the dynamics from the part that may result from the temperature
change itself. This study proposes a simple framework to unravel the
dynamic and non-dynamic (referred to as thermodynamic) components of
the cloud response to climate variations.
It is used to analyze the contrasted response, to a prescribed ocean
warming, of the tropically-averaged cloud radiative forcing (CRF)
simulated by the ECMWF, LMD and UKMO climate models. In each model,
the dynamic component largely dominates the CRF response at the
regional scale, but this is the thermodynamic component that explains
most of the average CRF response to the imposed perturbation. It is
shown that this component strongly depends on the behaviour of the
low-level clouds that occur in regions of moderate subsidence (e.g. in
the trade wind regions). These clouds exhibit a moderate sensitivity
to temperature changes, but this is mostly their huge statistical
weight that explains their large influence on the tropical radiation
budget.
Several propositions are made for assessing the sensitivity of clouds
to changes in temperature and in large-scale motions using satellite
observations and meteorological analyses on the one hand, and
mesoscale models on the other hand.
Texte in (pdf)
"© ;Springer-Verlag. Further reproduction or electronic distribution is not permitted. The original publication is available at springerlink.com."
N. M. Mahowald, J-L Dufresne,
Geophys. Res. Lett., Vol. 31, No. 3, L03103,
DOI: 10.1029/2003GL018865, 04 February 2004.
Abstract : The TOMS aerosol index (AI) is a powerful tool
in determining the sources of mineral aerosols. The sensitivity of
the AI to the height of the aerosol layer has been noted previously,
but the implications of this sensitivity for deducing sources has not
been explicitly considered. Here, we present a methodology and a
sensitivity test to show the importance of spatial and temporal
variations of the planetary boundary layer height to deducing sources
using the AI. These results suggest that while dry topographic low
sources may be large sources of desert dust, conclusions eliminating
other sources may be premature, especially when these sources occur on
the edges of deserts, where boundary layer heights are lower, and
human influences more important. The compounding problem of
differentiating downwind transport and local sources suggests it may
not currently be possible to use the AI to conclusively determine
mineral aerosol source regions.
Texte in
pdf file.
"© American Geophysical
Union. Further reproduction or electronic distribution is not permitted."
2002
Friedlingstein, P., J.-L. Dufresne, P.M. Cox, and P. Rayner
Tellus, april 2003, 55B (2), pp. 692-700
Abstract :
Future climate change induced by atmospheric emissions of greenhouse
gases is believed to have a large impact on the global carbon
cycle. Several offline studies focusing either on the marine or on the
terrestrial carbon cycle highlighted such potential adverse
effects. Two recent online studies, using ocean-atmosphere general
circulation models coupled to land and ocean carbon cycle models,
investigated in a consistent way, the feedback between the climate
change and the carbon cycle. These two studies used observed
anthropogenic CO2 emissions for the 1860-1995 period and IPCC
scenarios for the 1995-2100 period to force the climate-carbon cycle
models. The study from the Hadley Centre group, showed a very large
positive feedback, atmospheric CO2 reaching 980 ppmv by 2100 if future
climate impacts on the carbon cycle, but only about 700 ppmv if the
carbon cycle is assumed to be insensitive to the climate change. The
IPSL coupled climate-carbon cycle model, simulated a much smaller
positive feedback: climate impact on carbon cycle leads by 2100 to an
addition of less than 100 ppmv in the atmosphere. Here, we perform a
detailed feedback analysis to show that such differences are due to
two key processes that are still poorly constrained in these coupled
models, first Southern Ocean circulation which primarily controls the
geochemical uptake of CO2, and second vegetation and soil carbon
response to global warming. Our analytical analysis reproduces
remarkably the results obtained by the fully coupled models. Also it
allows us to identify, that amongst the two processes mentioned above,
the last one, the land response to global warming is the one that
essentially explains the differences between the IPSL and the Hadley
results.
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"© Further reproduction or electronic distribution is not permitted."
2001
M. Berthelot, P. Friedlingstein, P. Ciais, P. Monfray
,J. L. Dufresne, H. Le Treut, and L. Fairhead
Global Biogeochem. Cycles, 16(4), 1084, doi:10.1029/2001GB001827, 2002.
Abstract : We study the response of the land biosphere to
climate change by coupling a climate general circulation model to a
global carbon cycle model. This coupled model was forced by observed
CO2 emissions for the 1860 1990 period and by the IPCC SRES-A2
emission scenario for the 1991 2100 period. During the historical
period, our simulated Net Primary Production (NPP) and net land uptake
(NEP) are comparable to the observations in term of trend and
variability. By the end of the 21st century, we show that the global
NEP is reduced by 56% due to the climate change. In the tropics,
increasing temperature, through an increase of evapotranspiration,
acts to reduce the soil water content, which leads to a 80% reduction
of net land CO2 uptake. As a consequence, tropical carbon storage
saturates by the end of the simulation, some regions becoming sources
of CO2. On the contrary, in northern high latitudes, increasing
temperature stimulates the land biosphere by lengthening the growing
season by about 18 days by 2100 which in turn leads to a NEP increase
of 11%. Overall, the negative climate impact in the tropics is much
larger than the positive impact simulated in the extratropics,
therefore, climate change reduce the global land carbon uptake. This
constitutes a positive feedback in the climate-carbon cycle system.
Texte in
pdf file.
"© American Geophysical
Union. Further reproduction or electronic distribution is not permitted."
A. de Lataillade, S. Blanco, Y. Clergent, J.L. Dufresne, M. El Hafi and R. Fournier
J.Quant. Spectrosc. Radiat. Transfer,
Vol. 75, N.5, pp.529-538, Oct 2002
Abstract :
It is shown that, starting from any existing Monte Carlo algorithm for estimation of a physical quantity A, it is possible to implement a simple
additional procedure that simultaneously estimates the sensitivity of A to any problem parameter. The corresponding supplementary cost is
very low as no additional random sampling is required. The principle is presented on a formal basis and simple radiative transfer examples are
used for illustration.
Texte in
ps or
pdf file.
" © 2002 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. Further reproduction or electronic distribution is not permitted."
A. de Lataillade, J.L. Dufresne, M. El Hafi, V, Eymet, R. Fournier
J.Quant. Spectrosc. Radiat. Transfer,
Vol. 74, N.5, pp.563-584, Jul 2002
Abstract :
A Monte Carlo approach to radiative transfer in participating media is
described and tested. It solves to a large extent the well known
problem of Monte Carlo simulation of optically thick absorption
configurations. The approach which is based on a net-exchange
formulation and on adapted optical path sampling procedures is
carefully designed to insure satisfactory convergence for all types of
optical thicknesses. The need for such adapted algorithms is mainly
related to the problem of gaseous line spectra representation in which
extremely large ranges of optical thicknesses may be simultaneously
encontered. The algorithm is tested against various band average
computations for simple geometries using the Malkmus statistical
narrow band model.
Texte in
pdf file.
" © 2002 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd.Further reproduction or electronic distribution is not permitted."
Jean-Louis Dufresne, Catherine Gautier, Paul Ricchiazzi, Yves Fouquart
J. Atmospheric Science,
Vol. 59, N.12, pp.1959-1966, 15 June 2002
Abstract :
Scattering in the longwave domain has been neglected in the first
generation of radiative codes and is still neglected in most current
GCMs. Scattering in the longwave domain does not play any significant
role for clear sky conditions but recent works have shown that it is
not negligible for cloudy conditions. In this paper we highlight the
importance of scattering by mineral aerosols in the longwave domain
for a wide range of conditions commonly encountered during dust
events. We show that neglecting scattering may lead to an
underestimate of longwave aerosol forcing. This underestimate may
reach 50% of the longwave forcing at the top of atmosphere and 15%
at the surface for aerosol effective radius greater than a few tenths
of a micron. For an aerosol optical thickness of one and for typical
atmospheric conditions, the longwave forcing at the TOA increases to
8 W.m-2 when scattering effects are included. In contrast, the
heating rate inside the atmosphere is only slightly affected by
aerosol scattering: neglecting it leads to an underestimate by no more
than 10% of the cooling caused by aerosols.
Texte in
pdf or in
ps file.
"© 2002 American Meteorological Society. Further reproduction or
electronic distribution is not permitted."
Dufresne J-L, Friedlingstein P, Berthelot M, Bopp L, Ciais P,
L. Fairhead, H. LeTreut, P. Monfray
Geophys. Res. Lett., 29(10), 10.1029/2001GL013777, 23 May 2002
Abstract :
We use an ocean-atmosphere general circulation model coupled to land
and ocean carbon models to simulate the evolution of climate and
atmospheric CO2 from 1860 to 2100. Our model reproduces the
observed global mean temperature changes and the growth rate of
atmospheric CO2 for the period 1860-2000. For the future, we
simulate that the climate change due to CO2 increase will reduce
the land carbon uptake, leaving a larger fraction of anthropogenic
CO2 in the atmosphere. By 2100, we estimate that atmospheric CO2
will be 18% higher due to the climate change impact on the carbon
cycle. Such a positive feedback has also been found by
[Cox et al.,2000]. However, the amplitude of our feedback is
three times smaller than the one they simulated. We show that the
partitioning between carbon stored in the living biomass or in the
soil, and their respective sensitivity to increased CO2 and
climate change largely explain this discrepancy.
Texte in
pdf or in
ps file.
"© American Geophysical
Union. Further reproduction or electronic distribution is not permitted."
2000
Friedlingstein P, Bopp L, Ciais P, Dufresne JL, Fairhead L, LeTreut H,
Monfray P, Orr J,
Geophys. Res. Lett.,
Vol.28, No.8, pp. 1543-1546, Apr 2001
Abstract :
Future climate change due to increased atmospheric CO2 may affect land
and ocean efficiency to absorb atmospheric CO2. Here, using climate
and carbon three-dimensional models forced by a 1% per year increase
in atmospheric CO2, we show that there is a positive feedback between
the climate system and the carbon cycle. Climate change reduces land
and ocean uptake of CO2, respectively by 54% and 35% at 4 x CO2. This
negative impact implies that for prescribed anthropogenic CO2
emissions, the atmospheric CO2 would be higher than the level reached
if climate change does not affect the carbon cycle. We estimate the
gain of this climate-carbon cycle feedback to be 10% at 2 x CO2 and
20% at 4 x CO2. This translates into a 15% higher mean temperature
increase.
Texte in
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ps file.
"© 2001 American Geophysical Union. Further reproduction or electronic distribution is not permitted."
1999
1998
J-L.Dufresne,P. Friedlingstein
Lettre n.11 du Programme International Géosphère
Biosphère-Programme Mondial de Recherches sur le
Climat (PIGB-PMRC)
Résumé :
Depuis plus d'un siècle, la concentration en CO2 atmosphérique mesurée
a augmenté de 25% passant de 280 ppmv en 1860 à 360 ppmv de nos
jours. Cette augmentation serait environ deux fois plus forte si tout
le CO2 émis par les activités humaines restaient dans l'atmosphère ;
environ la moitié de ce CO2 émis est capté par la biosphère et par
l'océan. Comment réagissent ces puits à un changement climatique?
1996
C. Laurent, H Le Treut, Z.X.Li, L. Fairhead and J.L. Dufresne
Notes du pôle de modélisation de l'IPSL,
N.8, 1998
Abstract :
Multidecadal numerical experiments have been realized at different
resolutions using the coupled ocean-atmosphere general circulation
model developed at IPSL (Institut Pierre Simon Laplace) in Paris.
The atmospheric LMD model and the oceanic OPA-LODYC model are coupled
without any flux adjustment. The mean simulated climate is stable and
differs from reality through a few well established systematic
errors. The variability simulated by the model at these different
resolutions is compared for various areas, and more specifically the
North Atlantic. A statistical method, the Multi-channel Singular
Spectrum Analysis (M-SSA), is used to detect sea surface temperature
oscillations at different time scales. Oscillations over the North
Atlantic display a well-known tripole feature, which seems to depend
primarily on the ocean resolution. The period of the oscillation (from
8 to 12 years) seems more sensitive to the atmospheric resolution.
( Global coupled simulations of climate change due to increased
atmospheric CO2 concentration )
P. Barthelet, S. Bony, P. Braconnot, A. Braun, D. Cariolle, E. Cohen-Solal, J.-L.
Dufresne, P. Delecluse, M. Deque, L. Fairhead, M.-A. Filiberti, M. Forichon, J.-Y.
Grandpeix, E. Guilyardi, M.-N. Houssais, M. Imbard, H. Le Treut, C. Levy, Z.X. Li,
G. Madec, P. Marquet, O. Marti, S. Planton, L. Terray, O. Thual, S. Valcke
Compte Rendu Académie des Sciences Paris, Série II a,
Vol.326, No.10, p.677-684, mai 1998
Abstract :
Two transient CO2 experiments using two coupled general circulation
models developped by the french GASTON group have been realized using
the same methodology . No flux corrections at the air-sea interface
were used in these experiments. The main features of the present
climate are reasonably well captured by both coupled models in the
control simulations, although the biases are not the same. The
transient CO2 simulations show a global warming, ranging between 1.6 C
and 2.0 C at the time of CO2 doubling(+70 years). These values, and
the main geographical characteristics of climate change are in
agreement with previous studies published by other research groups,
using either flux corrected or non-flux corrected models.
Résumé :
Deux expériences climatiques
d'augmentation de la teneur en CO2 atmosphérique, utilisant
deux modèles de circulation générale
couplés océan/glace/atmosphère
développés au sein du groupe GASTON, ont
été réalisées selon la même
méthodologie, sans correction de flux artificielle à
l'interface air-mer. Les simulations de contrôle reproduisent
convenablement les caractéristiques principales du climat
actuel, les biais des deux modèles couplés étant
cependant différents. Les simulations de scénario
d'augmentation de la teneur en CO2 atmosphérique (1% par an)
indiquent un réchauffement global de la température
à la surface du globe compris entre 1,6°C et 2,0°C au
moment du doublement de la teneur en CO2 (+70 ans). L'amplitude ainsi
que la répartition géographique du réchauffement
sont en accord avec les résultats d'autres groupes de recherche
utilisant des modèles à flux corrigés ou non.
...1990
Cherkaoui M, Dufresne JL, Fournier R, Grandpeix JY, Lahellec A;
ASME Journal of Heat Transfer,
Vol.118, No.2, pp. 401-407, May 1996
Abstract :
The Monte Carlo method is used for simulation of radiative
heat transfers in non-gray gases. The proposed procedure is
based on a Net-Exchange Formulation (NEF). Such a formulation
provides an efficient way of systematically fulfilling the
reciprocity principle, which avoids some of the major problems
usually associated with the Monte Carlo method~: numerical
efficiency becomes
independent of optical thickness, strongly non uniform grid
sizes can be used with no increase in computation times and
configurations with small temperature differences can be
addressed with very good accuracy.
The Exchange Monte Carlo Method (EMCM) is detailed for a one-dimensional slab
with diffusely or specularly reflecting surfaces.
( Sea-ice/ocean/atmosphere thermodynamic coupling )
Dufresne J.L, Grandpeix J.Y.
Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique,
Note Interne 205, juin 1996
Abstract :
L'interface océan-glace de mer-atmosphère est
extrêmement hétérogène. Le modèle de glace-océan
du LODYC, utilisé par la comunauté "GASTON",
reproduit en partie cette hétérogénéité
(mailles mixtes contenant de l'océan libre et différents types de glace)
alors que les modèles d'atmosphère (Arpège, LMD 5)
ne la reproduisent pas ou peu (mailles
homogènes ou mailles mixtes océan libre - un seul type de glace). De plus,
aux hautes latitudes, une maille atmosphérique recouvre un nombre élevé de
mailles océaniques.
Nous avons développé un modèle de raccordement qui répartit de façon
différenciée les flux calculés par le modèle d'atmosphère
sur les diff'erents types de surface (océan libre ou
variétés de glace) en
fonction de leur distribution statistique (fraction surfacique) et
de leur caracteristiques individuelles (temp. de surface, albédo, etc...).
Ce modèle de raccordement garantit la conservation des
flux à l'interface.
Dans cette note, nous abordons tout d'abord le problème de la stabilité
numérique du raccordement
glace-atmosphère, puis présentons le modèle de raccordement développé.
Cherkaoui M., Dufresne J.L., Fournier R. , Grandpeix J.Y. , Lahellec A.
Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique,
Internal Report 204, Jun 1996
Abstract :
Additional numerical results to the paper of
(Cherkaoui et al., 1996)
( Inclusive identification procedure for a thermal system dynamical
characterization. Case study : an air solar collector wall componenet. )
Dufresne, J.L., Lahellec, A., Chounet L.M.,
Revue de Physique Appliquée,
Vol.25, No.11, p. 1139-1160, Nov. 1990
Abstract. - The dynamical characterisation of a solar component -
taken as a case study - introduced us to the general problem of non
linear multiparametric model identification (10 parameters in our
case). The elaboration of such a model has three goals : first, it has
to allow the designer to understand and improve his components ; then
it can be integrated in a global'system model (the building and
control devices) for real performances study ; and finally, it is a
guidance for the monitoring process in the purpose of fulfilling the
two previous objectives (global coherence). The method and its
implementation are described, and the results obtained for our case
study given ; we set a particular emphasis on the embedded coherence
between the monitoring stage - performed in a "Technical Center" in
the context of a normalisation procedure - and the physical model
parameters identification. In opposition to classical measurement
operation which allow different experiments to decouple each
parameter, the described method determines at once the whole set of
parameters versus the whole set of available experimental data
(inclusive identification). We then display a few procedure intrinsic
coherence tests as well as the accuracy obtained on the determined
parameters. One of the critical point of the procedure is the
measurement error analysis, because of its importance not only for the
resulting model accuracy, but as an essential information for a proper
use of the experimental data in the identification procedure itself.
(Experimental procedure for dynamic characterisation of a thermal component.
Example : wall-air solar collecter model identification)
Dufresne, J.L., Chounet L.M., Picard D., Gaillard P., Noppe J.M.,
Revue Générale de Thermique,
Vol.29, No.339, pp. 135-151, mars 1990
Résumé. -
Presentation d' une procedure experimentale d'identification des
modeles permettant de caracteriser precisement en regime dynamique des
composants physiquement complexes. Application a l'etude d' un
mur-capteur solaire a air. Description de l'installation experimentale
Chounet L.M., Dufresne, J.L., Franchisseur R., Lahellec, A.,
Rego-Texeira A.,
Revue Générale de Thermique,
Vol.28, No.335-336, p. 700-711, nov-dec 1989
Résumé. -
L'evaluation d'operations de rehabilitation requiert du point de vue
energetique un diagnostic initial correct et un outil de prevision
suffisamment fiable. Nous presentons cet ensemble methodologique sur
le suivi d'une operation prototype de renovation d'une cite OPHLM de
593 logements de la region parisienne. Nous montrons qu'un code de
calcul comme CALECO-DOE2, tres repandu est tout a fait adapte a ce
type d'analyse. Une analyse de credibilite de l'ensemble de la
demarche est resumee. Les conclusions portent sur les apports
methodologiques de notre travail et leurs limites, ainsi que sur le
developpement souhaitable des outils de modelisation
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