The simulation of ice sheet-climate interaction such as surface massbalance fluxes are sensitive to model grid resolution. Here we simulatethe multicentury evolution of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) and itsinteraction with the climate using the Community Earth System Modelversion 2.2 (CESM2.2) including an interactive GrIS component (theCommunity Ice Sheet Model v2.1 [CISM2.1]) under an idealized warmingscenario (atmospheric CO2 increases by 1% yr−1 until quadrupling thepre-industrial level and then is held fixed). A variable-resolution (VR)grid with 1/4◦ regional refinement over broader Arctic and 1◦ resolutionelsewhere is applied to the atmosphere and land components, and theresults are compared to conventional 1◦ lat-lon grid simulations toinvestigate the impact of grid refinement. An acceleration of GrIS massloss is found at around year 110, caused by rapidly increasing surfacemelt as the ablation area expands with associated albedo feedback andincreased turbulent fluxes. Compared to the 1◦ runs, the VR run featuresslower melt increase, especially over Western and Northern Greenland,which slope gently towards the peripheries. This difference patternoriginates primarily from the weaker albedo feedback in the VR run,complemented by its smaller cloud longwave radiation. The steeper VRGreenland surface topography favors slower ablation zone expansion, thusleading to its weaker albedo feedback. The sea level rise contributionfrom the GrIS in the VR run is 53 mm by year 150 and 831 mm by year 350,approximately 40% and 20% smaller than the 1◦ runs, respectively. 
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                            Evaluating the impact of enhanced horizontal resolution over the Antarctic domain using a variable-resolution Earth system model
                        
                    
    
            Abstract. Earth system models are essential tools for understandingthe impacts of a warming world, particularly on the contribution of polarice sheets to sea level change. However, current models lack full couplingof the ice sheets to the ocean and are typically run at a coarse resolution(1∘ grid spacing or coarser). Coarse spatial resolution isparticularly a problem over Antarctica, where sub-grid-scale orography iswell-known to influence precipitation fields, and glacier models requirehigh-resolution atmospheric inputs. This resolution limitation has beenpartially addressed by regional climate models (RCMs), which must be forcedat their lateral and ocean surface boundaries by (usually coarser) globalatmospheric datasets, However, RCMs fail to capture the two-way couplingbetween the regional domain and the global climate system. Conversely,running high-spatial-resolution models globally is computationallyexpensive and can produce vast amounts of data. Alternatively, variable-resolution grids can retain the benefits of highresolution over a specified domain without the computational costs ofrunning at a high resolution globally. Here we evaluate a historicalsimulation of the Community Earth System Model version 2 (CESM2)implementing the spectral element (SE) numerical dynamical core (VR-CESM2)with an enhanced-horizontal-resolution (0.25∘) grid over theAntarctic Ice Sheet and the surrounding Southern Ocean; the rest of theglobal domain is on the standard 1∘ grid. We compare it to1∘ model runs of CESM2 using both the SE dynamical core and thestandard finite-volume (FV) dynamical core, both with identical physics andforcing, including prescribed sea surface temperatures (SSTs) and sea ice concentrations fromobservations. Our evaluation reveals both improvements and degradations inVR-CESM2 performance relative to the 1∘ CESM2. Surface massbalance estimates are slightly higher but within 1 standard deviation ofthe ensemble mean, except for over the Antarctic Peninsula, which isimpacted by better-resolved surface topography. Temperature and windestimates are improved over both the near surface and aloft, although theoverall correction of a cold bias (within the 1∘ CESM2 runs) hasresulted in temperatures which are too high over the interior of the icesheet. The major degradations include the enhancement of surface melt aswell as excessive cloud liquid water over the ocean, with resultant impactson the surface radiation budget. Despite these changes, VR-CESM2 is avaluable tool for the analysis of precipitation and surface mass balanceand thus constraining estimates of sea level rise associated with theAntarctic Ice Sheet. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 1952199
- PAR ID:
- 10539816
- Publisher / Repository:
- The Cryosphere
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- The Cryosphere
- Volume:
- 17
- Issue:
- 9
- ISSN:
- 1994-0424
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 3847 to 3866
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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