April 29, 2026
Journal Article

The Energy Exascale Earth System Model version 3. 2 Overview of the coupled system

Abstract

The Energy Exascale Earth System Model version 3 (E3SMv3) represents the latest advancement in Earth system modeling developed by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to address critical scientific questions related to climate and energy. Building upon previous versions, E3SMv3 introduces significant updates across its coupled components to enhance capability and improve fidelity. The atmosphere component incorporates advancements in chemistry, aerosol-cloud interactions, convection, and microphysics. The ocean features a new time stepping scheme and a refined unstructured mesh with improved representation of mesoscale eddies and sub-ice-shelf cavities, while the sea ice model integrates advanced snow and ice physics for more realistic cryospheric simulations. The land model introduces prognostic vegetation dynamics and a new sub-grid topographic treatment of solar radiation. A new tri-grid configuration harmonizes the horizontal grids of the land and river components for improved process coupling. It is enabled by a new non-linear remapping between the atmosphere and land. E3SMv3 underwent extensive testing through a comprehensive simulation campaign, including pre-industrial control, idealized CO2 experiments, and historical simulations spanning 1850–2024. The model demonstrates significant improvements in simulating the evolution of the historical surface temperature, particularly addressing the “pothole cooling” bias in earlier versions. Reduced aerosol-related forcing contributes to more realistic radiative forcing and better alignment with the observational record. Ocean heat content and sea ice trends are also improved as a result.

Published: April 29, 2026

Citation

Golaz J., W. Lin, X. Zheng, S. Xie, A.F. Roberts, L. Van Roekel, and P.E. Thornton, et al. 2026. The Energy Exascale Earth System Model version 3. 2 Overview of the coupled system. Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems 18, no. 4:e2025MS005302. PNNL-SA-212473. doi:10.1029/2025MS005302

Research topics