Spatiotemporal Long-Range Persistence in Earth’s Temperature Field: Analysis of Stochastic-Diffusive Energy Balance Models
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/8447Date
2015-11-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
A two-dimensional stochastic–diffusive energy balance model (EBM) formulated on a sphere by G. R. North
et al. is explored and generalized. Instantaneous and frequency-dependent spatial autocorrelation functions and
local temporal power spectral densities are computed for local sites and for spatially averaged surface temperature
signals up to the global scale. On time scales up to the relaxation time scale given by the effective heat
capacities of the ocean mixed layer and land surface, respectively, scaling features are obtained that are reminiscent
of what can be derived from the observed temperature field. On longer time scales, however, the EBM
predicts a transition to a white-noise scaling, which is not reflected in the observed records. A fractional generalization,
which can be considered as a spatial generalization of the zero-dimensional, long-memory EBM of
M. Rypdal and K. Rypdal, is proposed and explored. It is demonstrated that this generalized model describes
qualitatively the main correlation characteristics of the temperature field reported in the literature and those
derived herein from 500-yr-long control simulations of the NorESM Earth system model. A further generalization
of the model, to include long-term persistence in the stochastic forcing, is also discussed.
Publisher
American Meteorological SocietyMetadata
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