An analogue approach to identify extreme precipitation events: evaluation and application to CMIP5 climate models in the United States
Xiang Gao, C. Adam Schlosser, Pingping Xie, Erwan Monier y Dara Entekhabi.
Cambridge, MA : MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change, 2013.
33 págs. : Tablas, mapas., figs., il. col.
Serie: Report ; Nº 253
También disponible en Internet.
Resumen: Global warming is expected to alter the frequency, intensity, and risk of extreme precipitation events. However, global climate models in general do not correctly reproduce the frequency and intensity distribution of precipitation, especially at the regional scale. We present an analogue method to detect the occurrence of extreme precipitation events without relying on modeled precipitation. Our approach is based on the use of composites to identify the distinct large-scale atmospheric conditions associated with widespread outbreaks of extreme precipitation events across local scales. The development of composite maps, exemplified in the south-central United States and the Western United States, is achieved through the joint analysis of 27-yr (1979–2005) CPC gridded station data and NASAs Modern Era Retrospective-analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA). Various circulation features and moisture plumes associated with extreme precipitation events are examined. This analogue method is evaluated against the MERRA reanalysis with a success rate of around 80% in detecting extreme events within one or two days. When applied to the climate model simulations of the 20th century from Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5), we find the analogues from the CMIP5 models produces more consistent (and less uncertain) total number of extreme events compared against observations as opposed to using their corresponding simulated precipitation over the three regions examined. The analogues also perform better to characterize the interanual range of extreme days with the smaller RMSE across all the models for all the descriptive statistics (minimum, lower and higher quartile, median, and maximum). These results suggest the capability of CMIP5 models to simulate the realistic large-scale atmospheric conditions associated with widespread local-scale extreme events, with a credible frequency. Collectively speaking, the presented analyses clearly highlight the comparative and enhanced nature of these results to studies that consider only modeled precipitation output to assess extreme-event frequency.
Incluye referencias bibliográficas.