Constraint on precipitation response to climate change by combination of atmospheric energy and water budgets

被引:0
|
作者
Guy Dagan
Philip Stier
机构
[1] University of Oxford,Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics, Department of Physics
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Global mean precipitation is expected to increase with increasing temperatures, a process which is fairly well understood. In contrast, local precipitation changes, which are key for society and ecosystems, demonstrate a large spread in predictions by climate models, can be of both signs and have much larger magnitude than the global mean change. Previously, two top-down approaches to constrain precipitation changes were proposed, using either the atmospheric water or energy budget. Here, using an ensemble of 27 climate models, we study the relative importance of these two budgetary constraints and present analysis of the spatial scales at which they hold. We show that specific geographical locations are more constrained by either one of the budgets and that the combination of water and energy budgets provides a significantly stronger constraint on the spatial scale of precipitation changes under anthropogenic climate change (on average about 3000 km, above which changes in precipitation approach the global mean change). These results could also provide an objective way to define the scale of ‘regional’ climate change.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Precipitation Extremes and Water VaporRelationships in Current Climate and Implications for Climate Change
    J. David Neelin
    Cristian Martinez-Villalobos
    Samuel N. Stechmann
    Fiaz Ahmed
    Gang Chen
    Jesse M. Norris
    Yi-Hung Kuo
    Geert Lenderink
    Current Climate Change Reports, 2022, 8 : 17 - 33
  • [22] An energetic perspective on the regional response of precipitation to climate change
    Muller C.J.
    O'Gorman P.A.
    Nature Climate Change, 2011, 1 (5) : 266 - 271
  • [23] Conceptual deconstruction of the simulated precipitation response to climate change
    Stassen, Christian
    Dommenget, Dietmar
    Chadwick, Robin
    CLIMATE DYNAMICS, 2020, 55 (3-4) : 613 - 630
  • [24] An energetic perspective on the regional response of precipitation to climate change
    Muller, C. J.
    O'Gorman, P. A.
    NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE, 2011, 1 (05) : 266 - 271
  • [25] Conceptual deconstruction of the simulated precipitation response to climate change
    Christian Stassen
    Dietmar Dommenget
    Robin Chadwick
    Climate Dynamics, 2020, 55 : 613 - 630
  • [26] Renewable energy: a response to climate change
    Sims, REH
    SOLAR ENERGY, 2004, 76 (1-3) : 9 - 17
  • [27] Response of precipitation isotopes and water vapor sources to regional climate change on the Gannan Plateau, China
    CHEN Fenli
    KANG Nan
    WANG Shengjie
    GAO Minyan
    ZHANG Qiuyan
    LI Huizhen
    YAO Yiwen
    Journal of Arid Land, 2025, 17 (04) : 440 - 456
  • [28] Response of precipitation isotopes and water vapor sources to regional climate change on the Gannan Plateau, China
    Fenli Chen
    Nan Kang
    Shengjie Wang
    Minyan Gao
    Qiuyan Zhang
    Huizhen Li
    Yiwen Yao
    Journal of Arid Land, 2025, 17 (4) : 440 - 456
  • [29] Fast and Slow Responses of Atmospheric Energy Budgets to Perturbed Cloud and Convection Processes in an Atmospheric Global Climate Model
    Yang, Ben
    Guo, Zhun
    Song, Fengfei
    Zhang, Yaocun
    Zhou, Tianjun
    Qian, Yun
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2023, 50 (20)
  • [30] Precipitation Extremes and Water Vapor Relationships in Current Climate and Implications for Climate Change
    Neelin, J. David
    Martinez-Villalobos, Cristian
    Stechmann, Samuel N.
    Ahmed, Fiaz
    Chen, Gang
    Norris, Jesse M.
    Kuo, Yi-Hung
    Lenderink, Geert
    CURRENT CLIMATE CHANGE REPORTS, 2022, 8 (01) : 17 - 33