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Publication Additional Information Download
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authorship
Tan, Y., Zwiers, F., Yang, S., Li, C., & Deng, K.
Title
The role of circulation and its changes in present and future atmospheric rivers over western North America
Year
2020
Publication Outlet
Journal of Climate, 33(4), 1261-1281.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-19-0134.1
Citation
Tan, Y., Zwiers, F., Yang, S., Li, C., & Deng, K. (2020). The role of circulation and its changes in present and future atmospheric rivers over western North America. Journal of Climate, 33(4), 1261-1281. https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-19-0134.1
Abstract
Performance in simulating atmospheric rivers (ARs) over western North America based on AR frequency and landfall latitude is evaluated for 10 models from phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project among which the CanESM2 model performs well. ARs are classified into southern, northern, and middle types using self-organizing maps in the ERA-Interim reanalysis and CanESM2. The southern type is associated with the development and eastward movement of anomalous lower pressure over the subtropical eastern Pacific, while the northern type is linked with the eastward movement of anomalous cyclonic circulation stimulated by warm sea surface temperatures over the subtropical western Pacific. The middle type is connected with the negative phase of North Pacific Oscillation–west Pacific teleconnection pattern. CanESM2 is further used to investigate projected AR changes at the end of the twenty-first century under the representative concentration pathway 8.5 scenario. AR definitions usually reference fixed integrated water vapor or integrated water vapor transport thresholds. AR changes under such definitions reflect both thermodynamic and dynamic influences. We therefore also use a modified AR definition that isolates change from dynamic influences only. The total AR frequency doubles compared to the historical period, with the middle AR type contributing the largest increases along the coasts of Vancouver Island and California. Atmospheric circulation (dynamic) changes decrease northern AR type frequency while increasing middle AR type frequency, indicating that future changes of circulation patterns modify the direct effect of warming on AR frequency, which would increase ARs (relative to fixed thresholds) almost everywhere along the North American coastline.
Program Affiliations
GWF: Global Water Futures
Project Affiliations
GWF-CPE: Climate-Related Precipitation Extremes
GWF-SDEPFC: Short-Duration Extreme Precipitation in Future Climate
Publication Stage
Published
Additional Information
Climate-Related Precipitation Extremes
Download Links
https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-19-0134.1
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