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contributor authorCheng, Linyin
contributor authorHoerling, Martin
contributor authorSmith, Lesley
contributor authorEischeid, Jon
date accessioned2019-09-19T10:08:19Z
date available2019-09-19T10:08:19Z
date copyright11/15/2017 12:00:00 AM
date issued2017
identifier otherjcli-d-16-0919.1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4261962
description abstractAbstractFactors responsible for extreme monthly rainfall over Texas and Oklahoma during May 2015 are assessed. The event had a return period of at least 400 years, in contrast to the prior record, which was roughly a 100-yr event. The event challenges attribution science to disentangle factors because it occurred during a strong El Niño, a natural pattern of variability that affects the region?s springtime rains, and during the warmest global mean temperatures since 1880. Effects of each factor are diagnosed, as is the interplay between El Niño dynamics and human-induced climate change.Analysis of historical climate simulations reveals that El Niño was a necessary condition for monthly rains to occur having the severity of May 2015. The model results herein further reveal that a 2015 magnitude event, whether conditioned on El Niño or not, was made neither more intense nor more likely to be due to human-induced climate change over the past century.The intensity of extreme May rainfall over Texas and Oklahoma , analogous to the 2015 event, increases by roughly 5% by the latter half of the twenty-first century. No material changes occur in either El Niño?related teleconnections or in overall atmospheric dynamics during extreme May rainfall over the twenty-first century. The increased severity of Texas/Oklahoma May rainfall events in the future is principally due to thermodynamic driving, although much less than implied by simple Clausius?Clapeyron scaling arguments given a projected 23% increase in atmospheric precipitable water vapor. Other thermodynamic factors are identified that act in opposition to the increase in atmospheric water vapor, thereby reducing the effectiveness of overall thermodynamic driving of extreme May rainfall changes over Texas and Oklahoma.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleDiagnosing Human-Induced Dynamic and Thermodynamic Drivers of Extreme Rainfall
typeJournal Paper
journal volume31
journal issue3
journal titleJournal of Climate
identifier doi10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0919.1
journal fristpage1029
journal lastpage1051
treeJournal of Climate:;2017:;volume 031:;issue 003
contenttypeFulltext


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