Responses of compound daytime and nighttime warm-dry and warm-humid events to individual anthropogenic forcings

被引:11
作者
Chiang, Felicia [1 ]
Cook, Benjamin, I [1 ,2 ]
McDermid, Sonali [1 ,3 ]
Marvel, Kate [1 ,4 ]
Schmidt, Gavin A. [1 ]
Nazarenko, Larissa S. [1 ,4 ]
Kelley, Maxwell [1 ,5 ]
机构
[1] NASA, Goddard Inst Space Studies, New York, NY 10025 USA
[2] Columbia Univ, Lamont Doherty Earth Observ, Palisades, NY USA
[3] NYU, Dept Environm Studies, New York, NY USA
[4] Columbia Univ, Ctr Climate Syst Res, New York, NY USA
[5] SciSpace LLC, New York, NY USA
关键词
anthropogenic forcings; compound events; climate extremes; TEMPERATURE RESPONSE; CLIMATE EXTREMES; LAND-COVER; ATTRIBUTION; MECHANISMS; IMPACTS; INDEX; CYCLE; HEAT; RISK;
D O I
10.1088/1748-9326/ac80ce
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Daytime heat is often associated with reduced soil moisture and cloud cover, while nighttime heat is connected to high humidity and increased cloud cover. Due to these differing mechanisms, compound daytime and nighttime heat events may respond differently to major anthropogenic forcings (greenhouse gases, anthropogenic aerosols, land-use and land-cover change). Here, we use GISS ModelE2.1-G historical single-forcing runs from 1955 to 2014 to examine how individual anthropogenic forcings affect compound heat events-specifically warm daytime and nighttime temperatures compounded with dry precipitation or high humidity conditions. We show that greenhouse gases alone amplify the natural frequency of warm-dry events by 1.5-5 times and warm-humid events by 2-9 times in tropical and extratropical latitudes. Conversely, aerosols and land-use/land-cover change reduce the frequency of these events, resulting in more modest increases and in some regions, declines, in the historical 'all-forcings' scenario. Individually, aerosol effects are stronger and more widespread compared to land-use, oftentimes reducing the natural frequency of these events by 60%-100%. The responses of these compound events are primarily driven by changes in daytime and nighttime temperatures through large-scale warming via greenhouse gases and cooling from aerosols and land-use/land-cover change. However, changes in warm-dry events are amplified in regions with concurrent precipitation declines (e.g. Central America, Mediterranean regions) and warm-humid events are amplified by global concurrent humidity increases. Additionally, we find differences between daytime and nighttime compound responses in the historical experiment that can be traced back to the individual forcings. In particular, aerosols produce a greater cooling effect on daytime relative to nighttime temperatures, which notably results in a historical reduction of Northern Hemisphere daytime warm-dry events relative to natural conditions. Our analysis provides a more comprehensive understanding of the significant impacts of different anthropogenic climate forcings on daytime and nighttime warm-dry and warm-humid events, informing future risk and impact assessments.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 63 条
[31]   Twentieth-century hydroclimate changes consistent with human influence [J].
Marvel, Kate ;
Cook, Benjamin I. ;
Bonfils, Celine J. W. ;
Durack, Paul J. ;
Smerdon, Jason E. ;
Williams, A. Park .
NATURE, 2019, 569 (7754) :59-+
[32]   Identifying external influences on global precipitation [J].
Marvel, Kate ;
Bonfils, Celine .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2013, 110 (48) :19301-19306
[33]   THE KOLMOGOROV-SMIRNOV TEST FOR GOODNESS OF FIT [J].
MASSEY, FJ .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN STATISTICAL ASSOCIATION, 1951, 46 (253) :68-78
[34]   Humid heat and climate change [J].
Matthews, Tom .
PROGRESS IN PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY-EARTH AND ENVIRONMENT, 2018, 42 (03) :391-405
[35]   Substantial increase in concurrent droughts and heatwaves in the United States [J].
Mazdiyasni, Omid ;
AghaKouchak, Amir .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2015, 112 (37) :11484-11489
[36]  
McKee TB, 1993, The relationship of drought frequency and duration to time scales, V17, P179
[37]   CMIP6 Historical Simulations (1850-2014) With GISS-E2.1 [J].
Miller, Ron L. ;
Schmidt, Gavin A. ;
Nazarenko, Larissa S. ;
Bauer, Susanne E. ;
Kelley, Maxwell ;
Ruedy, Reto ;
Russell, Gary L. ;
Ackerman, Andrew S. ;
Aleinov, Igor ;
Bauer, Michael ;
Bleck, Rainer ;
Canuto, Vittorio ;
Cesana, Gregory ;
Cheng, Ye ;
Clune, Thomas L. ;
Cook, Ben I. ;
Cruz, Carlos A. ;
Del Genio, Anthony D. ;
Elsaesser, Gregory S. ;
Faluvegi, Greg ;
Kiang, Nancy Y. ;
Kim, Daehyun ;
Lacis, Andrew A. ;
Leboissetier, Anthony ;
LeGrande, Allegra N. ;
Lo, Ken K. ;
Marshall, John ;
Matthews, Elaine E. ;
McDermid, Sonali ;
Mezuman, Keren ;
Murray, Lee T. ;
Oinas, Valdar ;
Orbe, Clara ;
Perez Garcia-Pando, Carlos ;
Perlwitz, Jan P. ;
Puma, Michael J. ;
Rind, David ;
Romanou, Anastasia ;
Shindell, Drew T. ;
Sun, Shan ;
Tausnev, Nick ;
Tsigaridis, Kostas ;
Tselioudis, George ;
Weng, Ensheng ;
Wu, Jingbo ;
Yao, Mao-Sung .
JOURNAL OF ADVANCES IN MODELING EARTH SYSTEMS, 2021, 13 (01)
[38]  
Mood AM, 1950, INTRO THEORY STAT
[39]  
Nagler Thomas, 2024, CRAN
[40]  
NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (NASA/GISS), 2018, **DATA OBJECT**, DOI 10.22033/ESGF/CMIP6.1400