Global sensitivity analysis of the climate–vegetation system to astronomical forcing: an emulator-based approach

A global sensitivity analysis is performed to describe the effects of astronomical forcing on the climate–vegetation system simulated by the model of intermediate complexity LOVECLIM in interglacial conditions. The methodology relies on the estimation of sensitivity measures, using a Gaussian proce...

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Main Authors: N. Bounceur, M. Crucifix, R. D. Wilkinson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2015-05-01
Series:Earth System Dynamics
Online Access:http://www.earth-syst-dynam.net/6/205/2015/esd-6-205-2015.pdf
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spelling doaj-1c2ae433df7245aa99ca39a81d7c7c152020-11-24T23:41:00ZengCopernicus PublicationsEarth System Dynamics2190-49792190-49872015-05-016120522410.5194/esd-6-205-2015Global sensitivity analysis of the climate–vegetation system to astronomical forcing: an emulator-based approachN. Bounceur0M. Crucifix1R. D. Wilkinson2Université catholique de Louvain, Earth and Life Institute, Georges Lemaître Centre for Earth and Climate Research, Louvain-la-Neuve, BelgiumUniversité catholique de Louvain, Earth and Life Institute, Georges Lemaître Centre for Earth and Climate Research, Louvain-la-Neuve, BelgiumUniversity of Nottingham, School of Mathematical Sciences, Nottingham, UKA global sensitivity analysis is performed to describe the effects of astronomical forcing on the climate–vegetation system simulated by the model of intermediate complexity LOVECLIM in interglacial conditions. The methodology relies on the estimation of sensitivity measures, using a Gaussian process emulator as a fast surrogate of the climate model, calibrated on a set of well-chosen experiments. The outputs considered are the annual mean temperature and precipitation and the growing degree days (GDD). The experiments were run on two distinct land surface schemes to estimate the importance of vegetation feedbacks on climate variance. This analysis provides a spatial description of the variance due to the factors and their combinations, in the form of "fingerprints" obtained from the covariance indices. The results are broadly consistent with the current under-standing of Earth's climate response to the astronomical forcing. In particular, precession and obliquity are found to contribute in LOVECLIM equally to GDD in the Northern Hemisphere, and the effect of obliquity on the response of Southern Hemisphere temperature dominates precession effects. Precession dominates precipitation changes in subtropical areas. Compared to standard approaches based on a small number of simulations, the methodology presented here allows us to identify more systematically regions susceptible to experiencing rapid climate change in response to the smooth astronomical forcing change. In particular, we find that using interactive vegetation significantly enhances the expected rates of climate change, specifically in the Sahel (up to 50% precipitation change in 1000 years) and in the Canadian Arctic region (up to 3° in 1000 years). None of the tested astronomical configurations were found to induce multiple steady states, but, at low obliquity, we observed the development of an oscillatory pattern that has already been reported in LOVECLIM. Although the mathematics of the analysis are fairly straightforward, the emulation approach still requires considerable care in its implementation. We discuss the effect of the choice of length scales and the type of emulator, and estimate uncertainties associated with specific computational aspects, to conclude that the principal component emulator is a good option for this kind of application.http://www.earth-syst-dynam.net/6/205/2015/esd-6-205-2015.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author N. Bounceur
M. Crucifix
R. D. Wilkinson
spellingShingle N. Bounceur
M. Crucifix
R. D. Wilkinson
Global sensitivity analysis of the climate–vegetation system to astronomical forcing: an emulator-based approach
Earth System Dynamics
author_facet N. Bounceur
M. Crucifix
R. D. Wilkinson
author_sort N. Bounceur
title Global sensitivity analysis of the climate–vegetation system to astronomical forcing: an emulator-based approach
title_short Global sensitivity analysis of the climate–vegetation system to astronomical forcing: an emulator-based approach
title_full Global sensitivity analysis of the climate–vegetation system to astronomical forcing: an emulator-based approach
title_fullStr Global sensitivity analysis of the climate–vegetation system to astronomical forcing: an emulator-based approach
title_full_unstemmed Global sensitivity analysis of the climate–vegetation system to astronomical forcing: an emulator-based approach
title_sort global sensitivity analysis of the climate–vegetation system to astronomical forcing: an emulator-based approach
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Earth System Dynamics
issn 2190-4979
2190-4987
publishDate 2015-05-01
description A global sensitivity analysis is performed to describe the effects of astronomical forcing on the climate–vegetation system simulated by the model of intermediate complexity LOVECLIM in interglacial conditions. The methodology relies on the estimation of sensitivity measures, using a Gaussian process emulator as a fast surrogate of the climate model, calibrated on a set of well-chosen experiments. The outputs considered are the annual mean temperature and precipitation and the growing degree days (GDD). The experiments were run on two distinct land surface schemes to estimate the importance of vegetation feedbacks on climate variance. This analysis provides a spatial description of the variance due to the factors and their combinations, in the form of "fingerprints" obtained from the covariance indices. The results are broadly consistent with the current under-standing of Earth's climate response to the astronomical forcing. In particular, precession and obliquity are found to contribute in LOVECLIM equally to GDD in the Northern Hemisphere, and the effect of obliquity on the response of Southern Hemisphere temperature dominates precession effects. Precession dominates precipitation changes in subtropical areas. Compared to standard approaches based on a small number of simulations, the methodology presented here allows us to identify more systematically regions susceptible to experiencing rapid climate change in response to the smooth astronomical forcing change. In particular, we find that using interactive vegetation significantly enhances the expected rates of climate change, specifically in the Sahel (up to 50% precipitation change in 1000 years) and in the Canadian Arctic region (up to 3° in 1000 years). None of the tested astronomical configurations were found to induce multiple steady states, but, at low obliquity, we observed the development of an oscillatory pattern that has already been reported in LOVECLIM. Although the mathematics of the analysis are fairly straightforward, the emulation approach still requires considerable care in its implementation. We discuss the effect of the choice of length scales and the type of emulator, and estimate uncertainties associated with specific computational aspects, to conclude that the principal component emulator is a good option for this kind of application.
url http://www.earth-syst-dynam.net/6/205/2015/esd-6-205-2015.pdf
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