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GFDL R30 COUPLED CLIMATE MODELS:
A Guide To Accessing R30 Model Output
Stored On GFDL's NOMADS Server
for DecCen Climate Research
Introduction
The GFDL R30 climate model is a coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation model
(AOGCM). Its four major components are an atmospheric spectral GCM, and ocean GCM,
and relatively simple models of sea ice and land surface processes.
The name "R30" is derived from the resolution of the atmospheric
spectral model (rhomboidal truncation at wave number 30).
This R30 model is identified as GFDL_R30_c in the Third Assessment Report of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
See Chapter 9, Table 9.1 of "Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis" IPCC Working Group I (2001).
The model output stored on this server is taken from six experiments
conducted at GFDL using the GFDL_R30_c model. Data files produced by one
long-running control integration (one with no changes in external forcings,
e.g., constant CO2) and five climate change scenario experiments have
been made accessible to interested researchers. More information
regarding the individual experiments is found in the
Control & Transient
Forcing Experiments section of these web pages.
This numerical model was developed and the experiments conducted by members of the
Climate Dynamics & Prediction Group
at the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL)
located in Princeton, New Jersey.
GFDL is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's
(NOAA's)
Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (OAR).
The model output products described on these pages
are provided as a service of the
Climate Dynamics & Prediction Group
at the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL)
in Princeton, NJ.
GFDL is one of the Office of Oceanic & Atmospheric Research
(OAR) laboratories
of the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), which is part
of the U.S. Department of Commerce
(DoC).
Note: The documentation presented on these web pages is a work in progress
and errors may exist. It is therefore recommended that in the
cases where references to published literature are given, the
user should refer to the original source.
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