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Title: Response of precipitation extremes to idealized global warming in an aqua-planet climate model: Towards robust projection across different horizontal resolutions

Journal Article · · Tellus. Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography

Current climate models produce quite heterogeneous projections for the responses of precipitation extremes to future climate change. To help understand the range of projections from multimodel ensembles, a series of idealized 'aquaplanet' Atmospheric General Circulation Model (AGCM) runs have been performed with the Community Atmosphere Model CAM3. These runs have been analysed to identify the effects of horizontal resolution on precipitation extreme projections under two simple global warming scenarios. We adopt the aquaplanet framework for our simulations to remove any sensitivity to the spatial resolution of external inputs and to focus on the roles of model physics and dynamics. Results show that a uniform increase of sea surface temperature (SST) and an increase of low-to-high latitude SST gradient both lead to increase of precipitation and precipitation extremes for most latitudes. The perturbed SSTs generally have stronger impacts on precipitation extremes than on mean precipitation. Horizontal model resolution strongly affects the global warming signals in the extreme precipitation in tropical and subtropical regions but not in high latitude regions. This study illustrates that the effects of horizontal resolution have to be taken into account to develop more robust projections of precipitation extremes.

Research Organization:
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), Berkeley, CA (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
Earth Sciences Division
DOE Contract Number:
DE-AC02-05CH11231
OSTI ID:
1039923
Report Number(s):
LBNL-4758E; TSAOD8; TRN: US201215%%65
Journal Information:
Tellus. Series A, Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography, Vol. 63, Issue 5; Related Information: Journal Publication Date: 2011; ISSN 0280-6495
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

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Cited By (11)

Evidence for added value of convection-permitting models for studying changes in extreme precipitation: EXTREME RAINFALL RESPONSE TO SST CHANGES journal December 2015
Tropical precipitation extremes: Response to SST-induced warming in aquaplanet simulations: PRECIP. EXTREMES journal April 2017
Midlatitude storms in a moister world: lessons from idealized baroclinic life cycle experiments journal August 2012
How well are daily intense rainfall events captured by current climate models over Africa? journal May 2013
GCMs with implicit and explicit representation of cloud microphysics for simulation of extreme precipitation frequency journal October 2014
A multimodel intercomparison of resolution effects on precipitation: simulations and theory journal February 2016
On the range of future Sahel precipitation projections and the selection of a sub-sample of CMIP5 models for impact studies journal June 2016
An examination of extratropical cyclone response to changes in baroclinicity and temperature in an idealized environment journal February 2018
Changes in intense rainfall events and dry periods across Africa in the twenty-first century journal January 2019
State-of-the-art climate modeling of extreme precipitation over Africa: analysis of CORDEX added-value over CMIP5 journal October 2018
A Review of Historical and Future Changes of Extratropical Cyclones and Associated Impacts Along the US East Coast journal July 2015