Potential to Constrain Projections of Hot Temperature ExtremesSource: Journal of Climate:;2017:;volume( 030 ):;issue: 024::page 9949DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0848.1Publisher: American Meteorological Society
Abstract: AbstractProjected changes in temperature extremes, such as regional changes in the intensity and frequency of hot extremes, differ strongly across climate models. This study shows that this disagreement can be partly explained by discrepancies in the representation of the present-day temperature distribution, motivating the evaluation of models with observations. By evaluating climate models on carefully selected metrics, the models that are more likely to be reliable for long-term projections of temperature extremes are identified. The study found that frequencies of hot extremes are likely to increase at a higher rate than the multimodel mean estimate over large parts of the Northern Hemisphere and Australia. This implies that a higher degree of adaptation is required for a given global temperature target. It also found that projected changes in the intensity of hot extremes can be constrained in several regions, including Australia, central North America, and north Asia. In many other regions, large internal variability can often hamper model evaluation. For both aspects?the intensity and the frequency of hot extremes?the total area over which the constraints can be implemented is limited by the quality and completeness of observations. Thereby, this study highlights the importance of long-term, high-quality, and easily accessible observational records for model evaluation, which are vital to ultimately reduce uncertainties in projections of temperature extremes.
|
Collections
Show full item record
contributor author | Borodina, Aleksandra;Fischer, Erich M;Knutti, Reto | |
date accessioned | 2018-01-03T11:01:24Z | |
date available | 2018-01-03T11:01:24Z | |
date copyright | 9/27/2017 12:00:00 AM | |
date issued | 2017 | |
identifier other | jcli-d-16-0848.1.pdf | |
identifier uri | http://138.201.223.254:8080/yetl1/handle/yetl/4246170 | |
description abstract | AbstractProjected changes in temperature extremes, such as regional changes in the intensity and frequency of hot extremes, differ strongly across climate models. This study shows that this disagreement can be partly explained by discrepancies in the representation of the present-day temperature distribution, motivating the evaluation of models with observations. By evaluating climate models on carefully selected metrics, the models that are more likely to be reliable for long-term projections of temperature extremes are identified. The study found that frequencies of hot extremes are likely to increase at a higher rate than the multimodel mean estimate over large parts of the Northern Hemisphere and Australia. This implies that a higher degree of adaptation is required for a given global temperature target. It also found that projected changes in the intensity of hot extremes can be constrained in several regions, including Australia, central North America, and north Asia. In many other regions, large internal variability can often hamper model evaluation. For both aspects?the intensity and the frequency of hot extremes?the total area over which the constraints can be implemented is limited by the quality and completeness of observations. Thereby, this study highlights the importance of long-term, high-quality, and easily accessible observational records for model evaluation, which are vital to ultimately reduce uncertainties in projections of temperature extremes. | |
publisher | American Meteorological Society | |
title | Potential to Constrain Projections of Hot Temperature Extremes | |
type | Journal Paper | |
journal volume | 30 | |
journal issue | 24 | |
journal title | Journal of Climate | |
identifier doi | 10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0848.1 | |
journal fristpage | 9949 | |
journal lastpage | 9964 | |
tree | Journal of Climate:;2017:;volume( 030 ):;issue: 024 | |
contenttype | Fulltext |