Strong influence of north Pacific Ocean variability on Indian summer heatwaves

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作者
Vittal Hari
Subimal Ghosh
Wei Zhang
Rohini Kumar
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[1] Indian Institute of Technology (Indian School of Mines),Department of Civil Engineering
[2] UFZ-Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research,Interdisciplinary Program in Climate Studies
[3] Indian Institute of Technology Bombay,Department of Plants, Soils and Climate
[4] Indian Institute of Technology Bombay,undefined
[5] Utah State University,undefined
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Increased occurrence of heatwaves across different parts of the world is one of the characteristic signatures of anthropogenic warming. With a 1.3 billion population, India is one of the hot spots that experience deadly heatwaves during May-June – yet the large-scale physical mechanism and teleconnection patterns driving such events remain poorly understood. Here using observations and controlled climate model experiments, we demonstrate a significant footprint of the far-reaching Pacific Meridional Mode (PMM) on the heatwave intensity (and duration) across North Central India (NCI) – the high risk region prone to heatwaves. A strong positive phase of PMM leads to a significant increase in heatwave intensity and duration over NCI (0.8-2 °C and 3–6 days; p < 0.05) and vice-versa. The current generation (CMIP6) climate models that adequately capture the PMM and their responses to NCI heatwaves, project significantly higher intensities of future heatwaves (0.5-1 °C; p < 0.05) compared to all model ensembles. These differences in the intensities of heatwaves could significantly increase the mortality (by ≈150%) and therefore can have substantial implications on designing the mitigation and adaptation strategies.
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