Observed High-Latitude Precipitation Amount and Pattern and CMIP5 Model Projections

Utilizing reanalysis and high sensitivity W-band radar observations from CloudSat, this study assesses simulated high-latitude (55–82.5°) precipitation and its future changes under the RCP8.5 global warming scenario. A subset of models was selected based on the smallest discrepancy relative to Cloud...

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Main Authors: Ali Behrangi, Mark Richardson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/10/10/1583
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spelling doaj-a393c57cdec9439c9fcafb42fe3cdb442020-11-24T23:04:56ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922018-10-011010158310.3390/rs10101583rs10101583Observed High-Latitude Precipitation Amount and Pattern and CMIP5 Model ProjectionsAli Behrangi0Mark Richardson1Department of Hydrology and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Arizona, 1133 E. James E Rogers Way, Harshbarger, Tucson, AZ 85721, USAJet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, 4800 Oak Grove Drive, MS 233-300, Pasadena, CA 91109, USAUtilizing reanalysis and high sensitivity W-band radar observations from CloudSat, this study assesses simulated high-latitude (55–82.5°) precipitation and its future changes under the RCP8.5 global warming scenario. A subset of models was selected based on the smallest discrepancy relative to CloudSat and ERA-I reanalysis using a combined ranking for bias and spatial root mean square error (RMSE). After accounting for uncertainties introduced by internal variability due to CloudSat’s limited four year day-night observation period, RMSE provides greater discrimination between the models than a typical mean state bias criterion. Over 1976–2005 to 2071–2100, colder months experience larger fractional modelled precipitation increases than warmer months, and the observation-constrained models generally report a larger response than the full ensemble. For everywhere except the Southern Hemisphere (SH55, for 55–82.5°S) ocean, the selected models show greater warming than the model ensemble while their hydrological sensitivity (fractional precipitation change with temperature) is indistinguishable from the full ensemble relationship. This indicates that local thermodynamic effects explain much of the net high-latitude precipitation change. For the SH ocean, the models that perform best in the present climate show near-median warming but greater precipitation increase, implying a detectable contribution from processes other than local thermodynamic changes. A Taylor diagram analysis of the full CMIP5 ensemble finds that the Northern Hemisphere (NH55) and SH55 land areas follow a “wet get wetter” paradigm. The SH55 land areas show stable spatial correlations between the simulated present and future climate, indicative of small changes in the spatial pattern, but this is not true of NH55 land. This shows changes in the spatial pattern of precipitation changes through time as well as the differences in precipitation between wet and dry regions.http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/10/10/1583precipitationremote sensingCloudSatCMIPhigh latitude
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ali Behrangi
Mark Richardson
spellingShingle Ali Behrangi
Mark Richardson
Observed High-Latitude Precipitation Amount and Pattern and CMIP5 Model Projections
Remote Sensing
precipitation
remote sensing
CloudSat
CMIP
high latitude
author_facet Ali Behrangi
Mark Richardson
author_sort Ali Behrangi
title Observed High-Latitude Precipitation Amount and Pattern and CMIP5 Model Projections
title_short Observed High-Latitude Precipitation Amount and Pattern and CMIP5 Model Projections
title_full Observed High-Latitude Precipitation Amount and Pattern and CMIP5 Model Projections
title_fullStr Observed High-Latitude Precipitation Amount and Pattern and CMIP5 Model Projections
title_full_unstemmed Observed High-Latitude Precipitation Amount and Pattern and CMIP5 Model Projections
title_sort observed high-latitude precipitation amount and pattern and cmip5 model projections
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Utilizing reanalysis and high sensitivity W-band radar observations from CloudSat, this study assesses simulated high-latitude (55–82.5°) precipitation and its future changes under the RCP8.5 global warming scenario. A subset of models was selected based on the smallest discrepancy relative to CloudSat and ERA-I reanalysis using a combined ranking for bias and spatial root mean square error (RMSE). After accounting for uncertainties introduced by internal variability due to CloudSat’s limited four year day-night observation period, RMSE provides greater discrimination between the models than a typical mean state bias criterion. Over 1976–2005 to 2071–2100, colder months experience larger fractional modelled precipitation increases than warmer months, and the observation-constrained models generally report a larger response than the full ensemble. For everywhere except the Southern Hemisphere (SH55, for 55–82.5°S) ocean, the selected models show greater warming than the model ensemble while their hydrological sensitivity (fractional precipitation change with temperature) is indistinguishable from the full ensemble relationship. This indicates that local thermodynamic effects explain much of the net high-latitude precipitation change. For the SH ocean, the models that perform best in the present climate show near-median warming but greater precipitation increase, implying a detectable contribution from processes other than local thermodynamic changes. A Taylor diagram analysis of the full CMIP5 ensemble finds that the Northern Hemisphere (NH55) and SH55 land areas follow a “wet get wetter” paradigm. The SH55 land areas show stable spatial correlations between the simulated present and future climate, indicative of small changes in the spatial pattern, but this is not true of NH55 land. This shows changes in the spatial pattern of precipitation changes through time as well as the differences in precipitation between wet and dry regions.
topic precipitation
remote sensing
CloudSat
CMIP
high latitude
url http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/10/10/1583
work_keys_str_mv AT alibehrangi observedhighlatitudeprecipitationamountandpatternandcmip5modelprojections
AT markrichardson observedhighlatitudeprecipitationamountandpatternandcmip5modelprojections
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