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Author Patra P K, Law R M, Peters W, Rdenbeck C, Takigawa M, Aulagnier C, Baker I, Bergmann D J, Bousquet P, Brandt J, Bruhwiler L, Cameron-Smith P J, Christensen J H, Delage F, Denning A S, Fan S, Geels C, Houweling S, Imasu R, Karstens U, Kawa S R, Kleist J, Krol M C, Lin S-J, Lokupitiya R, Maki T, Maksyutov S, Niwa Y, Onishi R, Parazoo N, Pieterse G, Rivier L, Satoh M, Serrar S, Taguchi S, Vautard R, Vermeulen A T, Zhu Z, doi  openurl
  Title TransCom model simulations of hourly atmospheric CO2: Analysis of synoptic-scale variations for the period 2002–2003 Type Journal Article
  Year (down) 2008 Publication Global Biogeochem. Cycles Abbreviated Journal  
  Volume 22 Issue 4 Pages GB4013 -  
  Keywords atmospheric CO 2, transport model, synoptic variations, 0368 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Troposphere: constituent transport and chemistry, 0414 Biogeosciences: Biogeochemical cycles, processes, and modeling, 3329 Atmospheric Processes: Mesoscale meteorology, 3307 Atmospheric Processes: Boundary layer processes,  
  Abstract The ability to reliably estimate CO2 fluxes from current in situ atmospheric CO2 measurements and future satellite CO2 measurements is dependent on transport model performance at synoptic and shorter timescales. The TransCom continuous experiment was designed to evaluate the performance of forward transport model simulations at hourly, daily, and synoptic timescales, and we focus on the latter two in this paper. Twenty-five transport models or model variants submitted hourly time series of nine predetermined tracers (seven for CO2) at 280 locations. We extracted synoptic-scale variability from daily averaged CO2 time series using a digital filter and analyzed the results by comparing them to atmospheric measurements at 35 locations. The correlations between modeled and observed synoptic CO2 variabilities were almost always largest with zero time lag and statistically significant for most models and most locations. Generally, the model results using diurnally varying land fluxes were closer to the observations compared to those obtained using monthly mean or daily average fluxes, and winter was often better simulated than summer. Model results at higher spatial resolution compared better with observations, mostly because these models were able to sample closer to the measurement site location. The amplitude and correlation of model-data variability is strongly model and season dependent. Overall similarity in modeled synoptic CO2 variability suggests that the first-order transport mechanisms are fairly well parameterized in the models, and no clear distinction was found between the meteorological analyses in capturing the synoptic-scale dynamics.
 
  Programme 416  
  Campaign  
  Address  
  Corporate Author Thesis  
  Publisher AGU Place of Publication Editor  
  Language Summary Language Original Title  
  Series Editor Series Title Abbreviated Series Title  
  Series Volume Series Issue Edition  
  ISSN 0886-6236 ISBN Medium  
  Area Expedition Conference  
  Notes Approved yes  
  Call Number Serial 1713  
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