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DOI10.1175/JCLI-D-17-0464.1
Different Ways of Framing Event Attribution Questions: The Example of Warm and Wet Winters in the United Kingdom Similar to 2015/16
Christidis, Nikolaos; Ciavarella, Andrew; Stott, Peter A.
2018-06-01
发表期刊JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
ISSN0894-8755
EISSN1520-0442
出版年2018
卷号31期号:12页码:4827-4845
文章类型Article
语种英语
国家England
英文摘要

Attribution analyses of extreme events estimate changes in the likelihood of their occurrence due to human climatic influences by comparing simulations with and without anthropogenic forcings. Classes of events are commonly considered that only share one or more key characteristics with the observed event. Here we test the sensitivity of attribution assessments to such event definition differences, using the warm and wet winter of 2015/16 in the United Kingdom as a case study. A large number of simulations from coupled models and an atmospheric model are employed. In the most basic case, warm and wet events are defined relative to climatological temperature and rainfall thresholds. Several other classes of events are investigated that, in addition to threshold exceedance, also account for the effect of observed sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies, the circulation flow, or modes of variability present during the reference event. Human influence is estimated to increase the likelihood of warm winters in the United Kingdom by a factor of 3 or more for events occurring under any atmospheric and oceanic conditions, but also for events with a similar circulation or oceanic state to 2015/16. The likelihood of wet winters is found to increase by at least a factor of 1.5 in the general case, but results from the atmospheric model, conditioned on observed SST anomalies, are more uncertain, indicating that decreases in the likelihood are also possible. The robustness of attribution assessments based on atmospheric models is highly dependent on the representation of SSTs without the effect of human influence.


领域气候变化
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000450689300001
WOS关键词EUROPEAN WINTER ; CLIMATE-CHANGE ; ATMOSPHERIC CIRCULATION ; ARCTIC AMPLIFICATION ; EL-NINO ; EXTREME ; PRECIPITATION ; TEMPERATURE ; WEATHER ; ENGLAND
WOS类目Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WOS研究方向Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
引用统计
被引频次:21[WOS]   [WOS记录]     [WOS相关记录]
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/19355
专题气候变化
作者单位Met Off Hadley Ctr, Exeter, Devon, England
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Christidis, Nikolaos,Ciavarella, Andrew,Stott, Peter A.. Different Ways of Framing Event Attribution Questions: The Example of Warm and Wet Winters in the United Kingdom Similar to 2015/16[J]. JOURNAL OF CLIMATE,2018,31(12):4827-4845.
APA Christidis, Nikolaos,Ciavarella, Andrew,&Stott, Peter A..(2018).Different Ways of Framing Event Attribution Questions: The Example of Warm and Wet Winters in the United Kingdom Similar to 2015/16.JOURNAL OF CLIMATE,31(12),4827-4845.
MLA Christidis, Nikolaos,et al."Different Ways of Framing Event Attribution Questions: The Example of Warm and Wet Winters in the United Kingdom Similar to 2015/16".JOURNAL OF CLIMATE 31.12(2018):4827-4845.
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