Potential Underestimation of Future Mei-Yu Rainfall with Coarse-Resolution Climate ModelsSource: Journal of Climate:;2018:;volume 031:;issue 017::page 6711DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-17-0741.1Publisher: American Meteorological Society
Abstract: AbstractThe amount of rainfall during June and July along the mei-yu front contributes about 45% to the total summer precipitation over the Yangtze River valley. How it will change under global warming is of great concern to the people of China because of its particular socioeconomic importance, but climate model projections from phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) show large uncertainties. This paper examines model resolution sensitivity and reports large differences in projected future summer rainfall along the mei-yu front between a low-resolution (Gaussian N96 grid, ~1.5° latitude?longitude) and a high-resolution (N216, ~0.7°) version of the Hadley Centre?s latest climate model, the HadGEM3 Global Coupled Configuration 2.0 (HadGEM3-GC2). The high-resolution model projects large increases of summer rainfall under two representative concentration pathway scenarios (RCP8.5 and RCP4.5) whereas the low-resolution model shows a decrease. A larger increase of projected mei-yu rainfall in higher-resolution models is also observed across the CMIP5 ensemble. These differences can be explained in terms of enhanced moist static energy advection and moisture convergence by stationary eddies in the high-resolution model. A large-scale manifestation of the anomalous stationary eddies is the contrasting response to the same warming scenario by the western North Pacific subtropical high, which is almost unchanged in N216 but retreats evidently eastward in N96, reducing the southwesterly flow and consequently moisture supply to the mei-yu front. Further increases in model resolution to resolve parameterized processes and detailed orographic features will hopefully reduce the spread in future climate projections.
|
Collections
Show full item record
contributor author | Chen, Xiaolong | |
contributor author | Wu, Peili | |
contributor author | Roberts, Malcolm J. | |
contributor author | Zhou, Tianjun | |
date accessioned | 2019-09-19T10:10:20Z | |
date available | 2019-09-19T10:10:20Z | |
date copyright | 5/29/2018 12:00:00 AM | |
date issued | 2018 | |
identifier other | jcli-d-17-0741.1.pdf | |
identifier uri | http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4262342 | |
description abstract | AbstractThe amount of rainfall during June and July along the mei-yu front contributes about 45% to the total summer precipitation over the Yangtze River valley. How it will change under global warming is of great concern to the people of China because of its particular socioeconomic importance, but climate model projections from phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) show large uncertainties. This paper examines model resolution sensitivity and reports large differences in projected future summer rainfall along the mei-yu front between a low-resolution (Gaussian N96 grid, ~1.5° latitude?longitude) and a high-resolution (N216, ~0.7°) version of the Hadley Centre?s latest climate model, the HadGEM3 Global Coupled Configuration 2.0 (HadGEM3-GC2). The high-resolution model projects large increases of summer rainfall under two representative concentration pathway scenarios (RCP8.5 and RCP4.5) whereas the low-resolution model shows a decrease. A larger increase of projected mei-yu rainfall in higher-resolution models is also observed across the CMIP5 ensemble. These differences can be explained in terms of enhanced moist static energy advection and moisture convergence by stationary eddies in the high-resolution model. A large-scale manifestation of the anomalous stationary eddies is the contrasting response to the same warming scenario by the western North Pacific subtropical high, which is almost unchanged in N216 but retreats evidently eastward in N96, reducing the southwesterly flow and consequently moisture supply to the mei-yu front. Further increases in model resolution to resolve parameterized processes and detailed orographic features will hopefully reduce the spread in future climate projections. | |
publisher | American Meteorological Society | |
title | Potential Underestimation of Future Mei-Yu Rainfall with Coarse-Resolution Climate Models | |
type | Journal Paper | |
journal volume | 31 | |
journal issue | 17 | |
journal title | Journal of Climate | |
identifier doi | 10.1175/JCLI-D-17-0741.1 | |
journal fristpage | 6711 | |
journal lastpage | 6727 | |
tree | Journal of Climate:;2018:;volume 031:;issue 017 | |
contenttype | Fulltext |