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contributor authorHogan, Emily
contributor authorNicholas, Robert E.
contributor authorKeller, Klaus
contributor authorEilts, Stephanie
contributor authorSriver, Ryan L.
date accessioned2019-10-05T06:39:59Z
date available2019-10-05T06:39:59Z
date copyright2/21/2019 12:00:00 AM
date issued2019
identifier otherJCLI-D-18-0075.1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4263033
description abstractAbstractExtreme temperature events can have considerable negative impacts on sectors such as health, agriculture, and transportation. Observational evidence indicates the severity and frequency of warm extremes are increasing over much of the United States, but there are sizeable challenges both in estimating extreme temperature changes and in quantifying the relevant associated uncertainties. This study provides a simple statistical framework using a block maxima approach to analyze the representation of warm temperature extremes in several recent global climate model ensembles. Uncertainties due to structural model differences, grid resolution, and internal variability are characterized and discussed. Results show that models and ensembles differ greatly in the representation of extreme temperature over the United States, and variability in tail events is dependent on time and anthropogenic warming, which can influence estimates of return periods and distribution parameter estimates using generalized extreme value (GEV) distributions. These effects can considerably influence the uncertainty of model hindcasts and projections of extremes. Several idealized regional applications are highlighted for evaluating ensemble skill and trends, based on quantile analysis and root-mean-square errors in the overall sample and the upper tail. The results are relevant to regional climate assessments that use global model outputs and that are sensitive to extreme warm temperature. Accompanying this manuscript is a simple toolkit using the R statistical programming language for characterizing extreme events in gridded datasets.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleRepresentation of U.S. Warm Temperature Extremes in Global Climate Model Ensembles
typeJournal Paper
journal volume32
journal issue9
journal titleJournal of Climate
identifier doi10.1175/JCLI-D-18-0075.1
journal fristpage2591
journal lastpage2603
treeJournal of Climate:;2019:;volume 032:;issue 009
contenttypeFulltext


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