Geoscientific Model Development (Jan 2022)

PARASO, a circum-Antarctic fully coupled ice-sheet–ocean–sea-ice–atmosphere–land model involving f.ETISh1.7, NEMO3.6, LIM3.6, COSMO5.0 and CLM4.5

  • C. Pelletier,
  • T. Fichefet,
  • H. Goosse,
  • K. Haubner,
  • S. Helsen,
  • P.-V. Huot,
  • C. Kittel,
  • F. Klein,
  • S. Le clec'h,
  • N. P. M. van Lipzig,
  • S. Marchi,
  • F. Massonnet,
  • P. Mathiot,
  • P. Mathiot,
  • E. Moravveji,
  • E. Moravveji,
  • E. Moreno-Chamarro,
  • P. Ortega,
  • F. Pattyn,
  • N. Souverijns,
  • N. Souverijns,
  • G. Van Achter,
  • S. Vanden Broucke,
  • A. Vanhulle,
  • D. Verfaillie,
  • L. Zipf

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-15-553-2022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15
pp. 553 – 594

Abstract

Read online

We introduce PARASO, a novel five-component fully coupled regional climate model over an Antarctic circumpolar domain covering the full Southern Ocean. The state-of-the-art models used are the fast Elementary Thermomechanical Ice Sheet model (f.ETISh) v1.7 (ice sheet), the Nucleus for European Modelling of the Ocean (NEMO) v3.6 (ocean), the Louvain-la-Neuve sea-ice model (LIM) v3.6 (sea ice), the COnsortium for Small-scale MOdeling (COSMO) model v5.0 (atmosphere) and its CLimate Mode (CLM) v4.5 (land), which are here run at a horizontal resolution close to 1/4∘. One key feature of this tool resides in a novel two-way coupling interface for representing ocean–ice-sheet interactions, through explicitly resolved ice-shelf cavities. The impact of atmospheric processes on the Antarctic ice sheet is also conveyed through computed COSMO-CLM–f.ETISh surface mass exchange. In this technical paper, we briefly introduce each model's configuration and document the developments that were carried out in order to establish PARASO. The new offline-based NEMO–f.ETISh coupling interface is thoroughly described. Our developments also include a new surface tiling approach to combine open-ocean and sea-ice-covered cells within COSMO, which was required to make this model relevant in the context of coupled simulations in polar regions. We present results from a 2000–2001 coupled 2-year experiment. PARASO is numerically stable and fully operational. The 2-year simulation conducted without fine tuning of the model reproduced the main expected features, although remaining systematic biases provide perspectives for further adjustment and development.