Disentangling the effects of sea surface temperature and CO2 in global machine learned weather-climate emulators

Abstract

While previous versions of the Ai2 Climate Emulator (ACE) have been trained with CO2 as a forcing, they are only accurate within a narrow range of scenarios, for example climate over the last 80 years forced by observed sea surface temperature (SST), sea ice, and CO2 (AMIP), or equilibrium or near-equilibrium climates with CO2 concentrations ranging from 1x to 4x that of the present day. Attempting to simulate climate forced by AMIP SST perturbed by +4 K or the response to an abrupt quadrupling of CO2, results in unphysical behavior. We attribute this to these models being trained on datasets where the SST and CO2 are correlated, limiting their ability to accurately learn their separate effects. In this study we introduce a new class of "random-CO2" reference simulations where the SST and CO2 are prescribed to vary independently. Trained on a balance of AMIP, equilibrium-climate, and random-CO2 data, and including a total energy conservation constraint for improved interpretability, we present a more data-efficient model that not only accurately emulates its reference model in scenarios in which previous models excelled, but also scenarios like AMIP +4 K and slab-ocean-coupled abrupt 4xCO2 where they did not. Limitations are that it has simplified or prescribed representations of other Earth system components like the ocean, land, and sea ice; does not expose other known climate drivers as forcings; and relies solely on physics-based model output for training data, inheriting the biases relative to observations thereof. Each of these represent opportunities for future work.

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