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contributor authorNguyen, Phu;Thorstensen, Andrea;Sorooshian, Soroosh;Zhu, Qian;Tran, Hoang;Ashouri, Hamed;Miao, Chiyuan;Hsu, KuoLin;Gao, Xiaogang
date accessioned2018-01-03T11:01:58Z
date available2018-01-03T11:01:58Z
date copyright7/7/2017 12:00:00 AM
date issued2017
identifier otherjhm-d-16-0201.1.pdf
identifier urihttp://138.201.223.254:8080/yetl1/handle/yetl/4246310
description abstractAbstractThe purpose of this study is to use the PERSIANN?Climate Data Record (PERSIANN-CDR) dataset to evaluate the ability of 32 CMIP5 models in capturing the behavior of daily extreme precipitation estimates globally. The daily long-term historical global PERSIANN-CDR allows for a global investigation of eight precipitation indices that is unattainable with other datasets. Quantitative comparisons against CPC daily gauge; GPCP One-Degree Daily (GPCP1DD); and TRMM 3B42, version 7 (3B42V7), datasets show the credibility of PERSIANN-CDR to be used as the reference data for global evaluation of CMIP5 models. This work uniquely defines different study regions by partitioning global land areas into 25 groups based on continent and climate zone type. Results show that model performance in warm temperate and equatorial regions in capturing daily extreme precipitation behavior is largely mixed in terms of index RMSE and correlation, suggesting that these regions may benefit from weighted model averaging schemes or model selection as opposed to simple model averaging. The three driest climate regions (snow, polar, and arid) exhibit high correlations and low RMSE values when compared against PERSIANN-CDR estimates, with the exceptions of the cold regions showing an inability to capture the 95th and 99th percentile annual total precipitation characteristics. A comprehensive assessment of each model?s performance in each continent?climate zone defined group is provided as a guide for both model developers to target regions and processes that are not yet fully captured in certain climate types, and for climate model output users to be able to select the models and/or the study areas that may best fit their applications of interest.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
typeJournal Paper
journal volume18
journal issue9
journal titleJournal of Hydrometeorology
identifier doi10.1175/JHM-D-16-0201.1
journal fristpage2313
journal lastpage2330
treeJournal of Hydrometeorology:;2017:;Volume( 018 ):;issue: 009
contenttypeFulltext


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