HadCM3
HadCM3 is a coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation model developed at the Hadley Centre in the United Kingdom. It was one of the major models used in the IPCC Third Assessment Report in 2001.
Unlike earlier AOGCMs at the Hadley Centre and elsewhere, HadCM3 does not need flux adjustment to produce a good simulation. The higher ocean resolution of HadCM3 is a major factor in this; other factors include a good match between the atmospheric and oceanic components; and an improved ocean mixing scheme. HadCM3 has been run to produce simulations for periods of over a thousand years, showing little drift in its surface climate.
HadCM3 is composed of two components: the atmospheric model HadAM3 and the ocean model HadOM3. Simulations use a 360-day calendar, where each month is 30 days.
Atmosphere model (HadAM3)
HadAM3 is a grid point model that has a horizontal resolution of 3.75 × 2.5 degrees in longitude × latitude. This corresponds to a spacing between points of approximately 300 km and is roughly comparable to T42 truncation in a spectral model. There are 96 × 73 grid points on the scalar grid; the vector grid is offset by 1/2 a grid box. There are 19 levels in the vertical using a hybrid coordinate system.The timestep is 30 minutes. Near the poles, fields are fourier-filtered to prevent instabilities due to the CFL criterion.
This is the model behind PRECIS as well as being the atmosphere component of the distributed computing project Climateprediction.net.
Ocean model (HadOM3)
The ocean model has a resolution of 1.25 × 1.25 degrees, 20 levels, and a timestep of one hour. Thus there are six ocean grid points for every atmospheric one. For ease of coupling the two models the grids are aligned and the ocean coastline is forced to be aligned to the atmospheric grid.Coupling
The atmospheric model is run for a day, and the fluxes at the atmosphere-ocean interface are accumulated. Then the ocean model is run for a day, with the reverse fluxes accumulated. This then repeats through the length of the run. Unlike its predecessor HadCM2 there is no need for flux correction—the model climate remains stable and does not significantly drift. The lack of flux correction is cited by the IPCC as one of the advances in modelling since the IPCC Second Assessment Report.The ocean model incorporates a thermodynamic-dynamic sea ice model with primitive dynamics.