skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: Characterization of extreme precipitation within atmospheric river events over California

Journal Article · · Advances in Statistical Climatology, Meteorology and Oceanography (Online)

Atmospheric rivers (ARs) are large, spatially coherent weather systems with high concentrations of elevated water vapor. These systems often cause severe downpours and flooding over the western coastal United States – and with the availability of more atmospheric moisture in the future under global warming we expect ARs to play an important role as potential causes of extreme precipitation changes. Therefore, we aim to investigate changes in extreme precipitation properties correlated with AR events in a warmer climate, which are large-scale meteorological patterns affecting the weather and climate of California. We have recently developed the TECA (Toolkit for Extreme Climate Analysis) software for automatically identifying and tracking features in climate data sets. Specifically, we can now identify ARs that make landfall on the western coast of North America. Based on this detection procedure, we can investigate the impact of ARs by exploring the spatial extent of AR precipitation using climate model (CMIP5) simulations and characterize spatial patterns of dependence for future projections between AR precipitation extremes under climate change within the statistical framework. Our results show that AR events in the future RCP (Representative Concentration Pathway)8.5 scenario (2076–2100) tend to produce heavier rainfall with higher frequency and longer days than events from the historical run (1981–2005). We also find that the dependence between extreme precipitation events has a shorter spatial range, within localized areas in California, under the high future emissions scenario than under the historical run.

Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
Grant/Contract Number:
AC02-05CH11231
OSTI ID:
1226108
Journal Information:
Advances in Statistical Climatology, Meteorology and Oceanography (Online), Journal Name: Advances in Statistical Climatology, Meteorology and Oceanography (Online) Vol. 1 Journal Issue: 1; ISSN 2364-3587
Publisher:
Copernicus PublicationsCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
Germany
Language:
English

References (32)

TECA: A Parallel Toolkit for Extreme Climate Analysis journal January 2012
Satellite and CALJET Aircraft Observations of Atmospheric Rivers over the Eastern North Pacific Ocean during the Winter of 1997/98 journal July 2004
Composite Predictor Maps of Extraordinary Weather Events in the Sacramento, California, Region* journal June 2008
A dependence measure for multivariate and spatial extreme values: Properties and inference journal March 2003
Wintertime Extreme Precipitation Events along the Pacific Northwest Coast: Climatology and Synoptic Evolution journal July 2012
Stationary max-stable fields associated to negative definite functions journal September 2009
Future changes in atmospheric rivers and their implications for winter flooding in Britain journal July 2013
Clustering of Maxima: Spatial Dependencies among Heavy Rainfall in France journal October 2013
Climate Change, Atmospheric Rivers, and Floods in California - A Multimodel Analysis of Storm Frequency and Magnitude Changes1: Climate Change, Atmospheric Rivers, and Floods in California - A Multimodel Analysis of Storm Frequency and Magnitude Changes journal June 2011
Variograms for spatial max-stable random fields book January 2006
Changes in temperature and precipitation extremes in the CMIP5 ensemble journal February 2013
Methods for Exploring Spatial and Temporal Variability of Extreme Events in Climate Data journal May 2008
Optimizing two-pass connected-component labeling algorithms journal March 2008
Modelling pairwise dependence of maxima in space journal January 2009
Meteorological Characteristics and Overland Precipitation Impacts of Atmospheric Rivers Affecting the West Coast of North America Based on Eight Years of SSM/I Satellite Observations journal February 2008
Climatological Characteristics of Atmospheric Rivers and Their Inland Penetration over the Western United States journal February 2014
Classical Extreme Value Theory and Models book January 2001
An investigation of the pineapple express phenomenon via bivariate extreme value theory: PINEAPPLE EXPRESS VIA BIVARIATE EXTREMES journal April 2012
Detecting atmospheric rivers in large climate datasets conference January 2011
Atmospheric rivers induced heavy precipitation and flooding in the western U.S. simulated by the WRF regional climate model: ATMOSPHERIC RIVER, PRECIPITATION, FLOOD journal February 2009
Statistical modeling of hot spells and heat waves journal October 2010
Relationships between Barrier Jet Heights, Orographic Precipitation Gradients, and Streamflow in the Northern Sierra Nevada journal October 2010
Description and Validation of an Automated Objective Technique for Identification and Characterization of the Integrated Water Vapor Signature of Atmospheric Rivers journal April 2013
The effect of horizontal resolution on simulation quality in the Community Atmospheric Model, CAM5.1 journal November 2014
Dropsonde Observations in Low-Level Jets over the Northeastern Pacific Ocean from CALJET-1998 and PACJET-2001: Mean Vertical-Profile and Atmospheric-River Characteristics journal April 2005
The detection of atmospheric rivers in atmospheric reanalyses and their links to British winter floods and the large-scale climatic circulation: ARS AND BRITISH WINTER FLOODS journal October 2012
Climate extremes indices in the CMIP5 multimodel ensemble: Part 1. Model evaluation in the present climate: CLIMATE EXTREMES INDICES IN CMIP5 journal February 2013
Flooding on California's Russian River: Role of atmospheric rivers journal January 2006
A Spectral Representation for Max-stable Processes journal November 1984
Climate extremes indices in the CMIP5 multimodel ensemble: Part 2. Future climate projections: CMIP5 PROJECTIONS OF EXTREMES INDICES journal March 2013
Changes in Temperature and Precipitation Extremes in the IPCC Ensemble of Global Coupled Model Simulations journal April 2007
Very extreme seasonal precipitation in the NARCCAP ensemble: model performance and projections journal June 2012

Related Subjects