Summary:
The general purpose of the SWING project is an international intercomparison of current
state-of-the-art water isotope general circulation models and related observational isotope data.
Background:
For more than four decades the isotopic composition of water stored in various archives
(e.g. ice cores, ground water) has been used to study changes in the hydrological cycle on
timescales from glacial-interglacial to short term variations. Such changes of the hydrological
cycle play a crucial role forcing both past and future variability of the Earth's climate system.
However, the interpretation of isotopic variations in terms of climate change is often handicapped
by an lack of other relevant observational climate parameters (e.g. temperature, relative
humidity, precipitation) both in space and time.

Schematic overview of the hydrological cycle showing approximate depletions in d18O [based on: GNIP Brochure, IAEA, 1996].
Modelling the isotopic composition of water within the hydrological cycle of general circulation
models (GCM) may help to overcome this deficit on available climate data. Isotope GCMs simulate
the 18O/16O (and/or 2H/1H) relation as an independent
quantity within a closed "model world" where all other relevant climate parameters are known,
too. This enables an improved analysis of (simulated) isotope variability in terms of climate
change. Modelling of stable water isotopes also offers the potential to improve our understanding
of current-day tropospheric and stratospheric water vapour and cloud processes.
To ensure isotope GCM reliability, any isotope GCM simulation must pass a rigorous comparison of simulated versus observed isotope data (model-data-intercomparison). In addition, artefacts in isotope simulations based on a specific GCM model set-up or parameterisation have to be identified. The latter can be achieved by comparing simulation results of several different isotope GCMs run under identical boundary conditions (model-model intercomparison).
Objectives:
During the last decade several state-of-the-art GCM models (GISS, ECHAM, LMD, GENESIS and others)
have been enhanced by the capability to simulate the atmospheric and/or ocean cycle of
H218O and 1H2H16O (=HDO). The SWING project
will serve as a platform to bring together experts from the various research groups to explore
the following topics:
-
enable an overview about ongoing isotope GCM modelling capabilities
-
serve as a platform for future common isotope simulation experiments
(see Roadmap)
of the various research groups
-
identify the most important need of new observational isotope data in space, time and the
various aggregate forms of water
-
strengthen the linkage between the modelling community and the key contributors of
observational water isotope data
-
serve as an interface to other model intercomparison studies
(see Links)
Organizational Form:
The SWING project was ignited in 2003 and formally started at a first workshop kindly
hosted by the IAEA, Vienna, Feb. 25-27, 2004 (see Workshops).
It will continue as a series of workshops plus direct informational exchange among the consortia
members. Participation of new project members with a strong interest in stable water isotopes is
warmly welcomed.
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