Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 22 segundos...
Inicio  /  Atmósfera  /  Vol: 32 Núm: 2 Par: 0 (2019)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Dependence of extreme precipitable water events on temperature

Sridhara Nayak    
Tetsuya Takemi    

Resumen

Recent IPCC reports suggest that the world is getting warmer. Consequently, the concentration of atmospheric water vapor, which determines the water for precipitation, is substantially increasing in accordance with the Clausius-Clapeyron (CC) relationship, which establishes that water vapor in the atmosphere increases at a rate of 7% per ºC of warming. In this study, we explored the relationship between extreme precipitable water events and temperature over the whole globe, its two hemispheres, and the 5º latitudinal bands by using NCEP/NCAR and MERRA-2 reanalysis data for 1980-2017. Our results indicate that extreme precipitable water events linked to temperature basically follow the CC relationship at temperatures roughly below 5 ºC and the sub-CC relationship for temperatures above ~5 ºC, globally and in both hemispheres. The relationship between extreme precipitable water events and temperature over latitudinal regions is not uniform and varies regionally. Our results further indicate that the increasing rate of extreme precipitable water events is higher in the tropics and mid-latitudes of the southern hemisphere than in the northern hemisphere. This study shows the usefulness of the principle of Clausius-Clapeyron relationship to explain extreme precipitable water events linked to temperature.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Do-Hyun Lee, Sang-Hun Lee, Saem-Ee Woo, Min-Woong Jung, Do-yun Kim and Tae-Young Heo    
Odor is a very serious problem worldwide. Thus, odor prediction research has been conducted consistently to help prevent odor. Odor substances that are complex odors are known, but complex odors and odor substances do not have a linear dependence. In add... ver más
Revista: Applied Sciences

 
Quan Li, Hang Zeng, Pei Liu, Zhengzui Li, Weihou Yu and Hui Zhou    
Recently, the homogenous flood generating mechanism assumption has become questionable due to changes in the underlying surface. In addition, flood is a multifaced natural phenomenon and should be characterized by both peak discharge and flood volume, es... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Qing Pan, Hui-Min Yin and Kwok W. Chow    
Internal waves in a stratified fluid with a constant buoyancy frequency were studied, with special attention given to rogue modes, extreme waves, dynamical evolution, and Fermi?Pasta?Ulam?Tsingou type recurrence phenomena. Rogue waves for triads in a gen... ver más

 
Jessie Louisor, Jérémy Rohmer, Thomas Bulteau, Faïza Boulahya, Rodrigo Pedreros, Aurélie Maspataud and Julie Mugica    
As low-lying coastal areas can be impacted by flooding caused by dynamic components that are dependent on each other (wind, waves, water levels?tide, atmospheric surge, currents), the analysis of the return period of a single component is not representat... ver más

 
Luis Angel Espinosa, Maria Manuela Portela, João Dehon Pontes Filho and Martina Zelenakova    
This paper explores practical applications of bivariate modelling via copulas of two likely dependent random variables, i.e., of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) coupled with extreme rainfall on the small island of Madeira, Portugal. Madeira, due to ... ver más
Revista: Climate