scholarly journals Future Changes in Convective Storm Days over the Northeastern United States Using Linear Discriminant Analysis Applied to CMIP5 Predictions

2016 ◽  
Vol 29 (12) ◽  
pp. 4327-4345 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harrison Li ◽  
Brian A. Colle

Abstract Future changes in the frequency of environmental conditions conducive for convective storm days (“CE days”) are determined for the northeastern United States (NEUS) during the warm seasons (April–September) of the twenty-first century. Statistical relationships between historical runs of seven models in phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) and radar-classified convective storm days are developed using linear discriminant analysis (LDA), and these relationships are then applied to analyze changes in the convective environment under the high-emissions representative concentration pathway 8.5 (RCP8.5) scenario over the period 2006–99. The 1996–2007 warm seasons are used to train the LDA thresholds using convective precipitation from two reanalysis datasets and radar data, and the 1979–95 and 2008–10 warm seasons are used to verify these thresholds. For the CMIP5 historical period (1979–2005), the frequency of warm season CE days averaged across the CMIP5 models is slightly greater than that derived using reanalysis data, although both methods indicate a slight increasing trend through the historical period. Between 2006 and 2099, warm season CE day frequency is predicted to increase substantially at an average rate of 4–5 days decade−1 (50%–80% increase over the entire period). These changes are mostly attributed to a predicted 30%–40% increase in midlevel precipitable water between the historical period and the last few decades of the twenty-first century. Consistent with previous studies, there is decreasing deep-layer vertical wind shear as a result of a weakening horizontal temperature gradient, but this is outweighed by increases in instability led by the moisture increases.

2014 ◽  
Vol 27 (19) ◽  
pp. 7285-7300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harrison Li ◽  
Brian A. Colle

Abstract Long-term changes in warm season (April–September) convective storm frequency over the northeastern United States (NEUS) and the environmental conditions favoring such storms are explored from 1979 to 2010. Linear discriminant analysis (LDA) was used to create thresholds for predicting annual warm season convective storm frequency over various small regions of the NEUS by relating the convective precipitation fields from the North American Regional Reanalysis (NARR) and the Climate Forecast System Reanalysis (CFSR) along with reflectivity data from the National Operational Weather Radar (NOWrad) archive at 2-km grid spacing from 1996 to 2006 to convective parameters in the reanalyses. On average, convective frequency is greatest across inland areas of the NEUS, particularly southern Pennsylvania, with a sharp decrease along the immediate coast. Across western Pennsylvania convective storm frequency has significantly (p < 0.01) decreased from 1979 to 2010, while closer to the coast convective frequency has increased slightly. There has also been a corresponding trend in warm season convective precipitation amounts, with decreasing amounts over inland Pennsylvania and increasing amounts near the coast. This general pattern of inland decreases and coastal increases is largely related to trends in low-level instability, which are attributable mainly to changes in low-level moisture. Analyzing convective parameters over small regions is an important consideration for future climate studies of convection, since using a single LDA threshold over a region encompassing a large portion of the NEUS failed to capture significant spatial differences in convective frequency and was substantially less accurate than using separate thresholds for smaller regions of the NEUS.


2016 ◽  
Vol 29 (12) ◽  
pp. 4637-4649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shannon M. Jones ◽  
David S. Gutzler

Abstract Southwestern North America (SWNA) is projected to become drier in the twenty-first century as both precipitation (P) and evaporation (E) rates change with increasing greenhouse gas concentration. The authors diagnose the relative contributions of changes in P and E to the local surface moisture balance (P − E) in cold and warm halves of the year across SWNA. Trends in P − E vary spatially between the arid southern subregion (mostly northern Mexico) and the more temperate northern subregion (southwest United States), although both subregions exhibit a negative trend in P − E (trending toward more arid conditions) in CMIP5 projections for the twenty-first century. The P − E trend is biggest in the cold season, when much of the base flow to rivers in the southwest United States is generated. The downward trend in cold season P − E across SWNA is caused primarily by increasing E in the north and decreasing P in the south. Decreasing P is the primary contributor to modest warm season drying trends in both northern and southern subregions. Also, P accounts for most of the interannual variability in SWNA P − E and is strongly correlated with modes of oceanic natural variability during the cold season. SWNA aridification is therefore most readily distinguished from the region’s large natural climate variability in the cold season in the northern subregion, where the projected temperature-driven increase in E is greater than the projected decrease in P.


2014 ◽  
Vol 41 (20) ◽  
pp. 7343-7350 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. E. Clifton ◽  
A. M. Fiore ◽  
G. Correa ◽  
L. W. Horowitz ◽  
V. Naik

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