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  5. Sensitivity of Tropical Cyclone Rainfall to Idealized Global Scale Forcings
 
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Sensitivity of Tropical Cyclone Rainfall to Idealized Global Scale Forcings

Author(s)
Villarini, G.  
The University of Iowa  
Lavers, D.  
The University of Iowa  
Scoccimarro, E.  
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Sezione Bologna, Bologna, Italia  
Zhao, M.  
GFDL  
Wehner, M.  
LBNL  
Vecchi, G. A.  
GFDL  
Knutson, T. R.  
GFDL  
Reed, K.  
NCAR  
Language
English
Obiettivo Specifico
4A. Clima e Oceani
Status
Published
JCR Journal
JCR Journal
Peer review journal
Yes
Journal
Journal of climate  
Issue/vol(year)
12/27 (2014)
ISSN
0894-8755
Electronic ISSN
1520-0442
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Pages (printed)
4622–4641
Date Issued
2014
DOI
10.1175/JCLI-D-13-00780.1
Alternative Location
http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/JCLI-D-13-00780.1
URI
https://www.earth-prints.org/handle/2122/8993
Subjects
01. Atmosphere::01.01. Atmosphere::01.01.02. Climate  
Subjects

tropical cyclones

precipitation

rainfall

extreme events

Abstract
Heavy rainfall and flooding associated with tropical cyclones (TCs) are responsible for a large number of fatalities and economic damage worldwide. Despite their large socio-economic impacts, research into heavy rainfall and flooding associated with TCs has received limited attention to date, and still represents a major challenge. Our capability to adapt to future changes in heavy rainfall and flooding associated with TCs is inextricably linked to and informed by our understanding of the sensitivity of TC rainfall to likely future forcing mechanisms. Here we use a set of idealized high-resolution atmospheric model experiments produced as part of the U.S. CLIVAR Hurricane Working Group activity to examine TC response to idealized global-scale perturbations: the doubling of CO2, uniform 2K increases in global sea surface temperature (SST), and their combined impact. As a preliminary but key step, daily rainfall patterns of composite TCs within climate model outputs are first compared and contrasted to the observational records. To assess similarities and differences across different regions in response to the warming scenarios, analyses are performed at the global and hemispheric scales and in six global TC ocean basins. The results indicate a reduction in TC daily precipitation rates in the doubling CO2 scenario (on the order of 5% globally), and an increase in TC rainfall rates associated with a uniform increase of 2K in SST (both alone and in combination with CO2 doubling; on the order of 10-20% globally).
Type
article
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villarini_jcli_2014.pdf

Description
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Size

2.15 MB

Format

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Checksum (MD5)

8431f1d173ef30ea0df37b8198b1805a

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