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  4. Global and regional increase of precipitation extremes under global warming
 
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Global and regional increase of precipitation extremes under global warming

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2019-05-09
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Papalexiou, Simon Michael  
Montanari, Alberto  
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/57897
Journal
Water resources research  
Volume
55
Issue
6
Start Page
4901
End Page
4914
Citation
Water Resources Research 55 (6): 4901-4914 (2019)
Publisher DOI
10.1029/2018WR024067
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85067848219
Publisher
Wiley
Global warming is expected to change the regime of extreme precipitation. Physical laws translate increasing atmospheric heat into increasing atmospheric water content that drives precipitation changes. Within the literature, general agreement is that extreme precipitation is changing, yet different assessment methods, data sets, and study periods may result in different patterns and rates of change. Here we perform a global analysis of 8,730 daily precipitation records focusing on the 1964–2013 period when the global warming accelerates. We introduce a novel analysis of the N largest extremes in records having N complete years within the study period. Based on these extremes, which represent more accurately heavy precipitation than annual maxima, we form time series of their annual frequency and mean annual magnitude. The analysis offers new insights and reveals (1) global and zonal increasing trends in the frequency of extremes that are highly unlikely under the assumption of stationarity and (2) magnitude changes that are not as evident. Frequency changes reveal a coherent spatial pattern with increasing trends being detected in large parts of Eurasia, North Australia, and the Midwestern United States. Globally, over the last decade of the studied period we find 7% more extreme events than the expected number. Finally, we report that changes in magnitude are not in general correlated with changes in frequency.
Subjects
frequency changes
global precipitation extremes
regional and local increases
stationarity
DDC Class
600: Technology
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