Spatiotemporal variability of air temperature biases in regional climate models over the Greenland ice sheet
Regional climate models (RCMs) are fundamental tools in understanding and quantifying the
contribution of the Greenland ice sheet to sea-level rise. We perform an extensive evaluation of
the daily air temperature simulated by two RCMs, MARv3.12 and RACMO2.3p2, and a global
atmospheric reanalysis, ERA5, at 35 locations across the ice sheet over the period 1995–2020. We
compare model results to weather station data from two climate networks, focusing on the spatial
and temporal variability in mean biases (MBs). All three models perform well at low elevations
(1.70∘C) are found at high elevations (>1500 m a.s.l.). Temperature biases exhibit a strong
seasonality, being more pronounced during winter and much smaller during summer ranging
from 0.11∘C to 0.59∘C. No interannual variability is found in the biases of all three datasets. Daily
variability within each month is captured well by both climate models and the reanalysis at most
locations. Finally, all three models perform overall better in the ablation zone during summer,
i.e. where and when considerable melt production occurs
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Published
Author(s):
Authors: Covi, Federico ORCID record for Federico Covi, Hock, Regine, Rennermalm, Åsa ORCID record for Åsa Rennermalm, Fettweis, Xavier ORCID record for Xavier Fettweis, Noël, Brice