An Introduction to
Three-Dimensional Climate Modeling"This
is an excellent book, well formatted, readable, and very informative to those
entering the field or its neighbors."
--Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., June 2006
"An excellent second edition...Compliments to the authors
for a useful and carefully written book. I will assign it to my new
Ph.D. students in the same way as I have asked them for almost two decades to
read the first edition."
--Oceanography, Vol. 18, No. 3, Sept. 2005
This book provides an introduction to the development of three-dimensional climate models, including their four major components: atmosphere, ocean, land/vegetation, and sea ice. The fundamental processes in each component and the interactions among them are explained using basic scientific principles, and elements of the numerical methods used in solving the model equations are also provided. The authors show how the theory and models grew historically and how well they are able to account for known aspects of the climate system. This book is written so that a reader who is only vaguely aware of climate models will be able to gain an understanding of what the models are attempting to simulate, how the models are constructed, what the models have succeeded in simulating, and how the models are being used. Examples illustrating the use of the models to simulate aspects of the current climate system are followed by examples illustrating the application of the models to important scientific areas such as understanding paleoclimates, the last millennium, the El Nino/Southern Oscillation, and the effects of increasing greenhouse gas concentrations on future climate change. The book is appropriate for scientists, graduate students, and upper-level undergraduates and can be used as a textbook or for self study and reference. The authors have considerably updated the book from the first edition by adding descriptions of many techniques and results developed since the mid-1980s.
Warren Washington has been
a scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) since 1963
and is head of the Climate Change Research Section in the Climate and Glob
al
Dynamics Division at NCAR. He is the Chair of the Presidential appointed
National Science Board and he is an internationally recognized expert in
atmospheric science and climate research, who serves on the Secretary of Energy’s
Department of Energy Biological and Environmental Research Advisory Committee (BERAC).
He is a member of the American Philosophical Society, the National Academy of
Engineering, the National Academies of Science Coordinating Committee on Global
Change, and distinguished alumni of Oregon State and Pennsylvania State
Universities. He is a fellow of American Meteorology Society and the American
Association for the Advancement of Science.
In 1994, Dr. Washington served as President of American Meteorological
Society.
Claire L. Parkinson has
been a climatologist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center since 1978, with a
research emphasis on polar sea ice a
nd
climate change. She is also Project Scientist for the Aqua
satellite mission, aimed at improved
understanding of the coupled atmosphere/ocean/land/ice system, has done field work in both polar regions, and has written books on
satellite Earth observations and the history of science. She has a B.A. from Wellesley College and a Ph.D. from Ohio State University and has served on committees for NASA, NOAA, and the National Academy of Sciences. She is a Fellow of both the
American Meteorological Society and Phi Beta Kappa and received a NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal in 2003 and the
Goldthwait Polar Medal from Ohio State's
Byrd Polar Research Center
in 2004.