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Lettenmaier, D.P.; Stamm, J.F.; Wood, E.F.
Electric Power Research Inst., Palo Alto, CA (United States); Washington Univ., Seattle, WA (United States); Princeton Univ., NJ (United States). Dept. of Civil Engineering and Operations Research. Funding organisation: Electric Power Research Inst., Palo Alto, CA (United States)1993
Electric Power Research Inst., Palo Alto, CA (United States); Washington Univ., Seattle, WA (United States); Princeton Univ., NJ (United States). Dept. of Civil Engineering and Operations Research. Funding organisation: Electric Power Research Inst., Palo Alto, CA (United States)1993
AbstractAbstract
[en] A Variable Infiltration Capacity (VIC) model is described for the representation of land surface hydrology in General Circulation Models (GCMs). The VIC model computes runoff as a function of the distribution of soil moisture capacity within a GCM grid cell. The major distinguishing feature of the VIC model relative to the bucket model currently used to represent the land surface in many GCMs is that it parameterizes the nonlinearity of the fraction of precipitation that infiltrates over a large area (hence the production of direct runoff) as a function of spatial average soil moisture storage, and that it models subsurface runoff between storms via a simple recession mechanism. The VIC model was incorporated into the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL) GCM at R15 resolution (roughly 4.5 degrees latitude by 7.5 degrees longitude). Ten-year simulations of global climate were produced using the GFDL GCM with both VIC land surface hydrology, and, for comparison purposes, the standard bucket representation. Comparison of the ten year runs using the VIC model with those using bucket hydrology showed that for the VIC run, global average runoff increased, soil moisture decreased, evaporation decreased, land surface temperature increased, and precipitation decreased. As expected, changes in precipitation occurred primarily over the continents, especially in the northern hemisphere. Changes in the surface water balance for Africa, Australia, and South America were much less than for North American and Eurasia. Both VIC and bucket simulations of surface air temperature and precipitation were compared with gridded monthly average observation fields. These comparisons indicated that the VIC hydrology reproduced winter temperatures better, and summer temperatures worse, than the bucket model. The VIC hydrology better represented global precipitation, primarily as a result of partially reducing the upward bias in precipitation associated with the GFDL R15 bucket runs
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Apr 1993; 68 p; EPRI Distribution Center, 207 Coggins Drive, PO Box 23205, Pleasant Hill, CA 94523
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