‘Dynamically simulated tropic storms in a changing climate and their impact on the assessment of future climate risk’ - PhD project Ray Bell Supervisors.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Hurricanes and Climate Change: What do the Observations Show? Hurricanes and Climate Change: What do the Observations Show? 25 April 2012 Chris Landsea,
Advertisements

1 Severe Weather Response to Climate Change: The Expected and the Unexpected Regional Climate Research Section NCAR Earth System Laboratory NCAR is Sponsored.
Impacts of Climate Change on Tropical Cyclones
Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change Results from HiGEM Ray Bell Supervisors – Prof. Pier Luigi Vidale, Dr. Kevin Hodges and Dr. Jane Strachan Trop goup.
Apologies for the lack of work…. 5 weeks HiGEM1.1 and HiGEM1.2 ‘to add more variability’ 3/4 weeks HiGEM1.1 ≠ HiGEM1.2.
Tropical Cyclone Intensities: Recent observational studies and simulated response to CO2-induced warming Thomas R. Knutson NOAA/Geophysical Fluid Dynamics.
25 October 2006MPI for Meteorology Hamburg Hurricane type vortices in ECHAM5. How will they change in a warmer climate? Lennart Bengtsson with Kevin Hodges,
Suzana J. Camargo Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Columbia University ANALYSIS OF 20 TH CENTURY ATLANTIC HURRICANE POTENTIAL INTENSITY AND TROPICAL CYCLONE.
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Review June 30 - July 2, 2009 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Review June 30 - July 2, 2009.
Simulation of the Global ENSO-Tropical Cyclone Teleconnection by a High-Resolution Coupled GCM Ray Bell, Kevin Hodges, Pier Luigi Vidale, Jane Strachan.
1 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Review June 30 - July 2, 2009.
Projections of Future Atlantic Hurricane Activity Hurricane Katrina, Aug GFDL model simulation of Atlantic hurricane activity Tom Knutson NOAA /
CLIMATE CHANGE AND GLOBAL DAMAGES FROM TROPICAL CYCLONES Robert Mendelsohn Kerry Emanuel Shun Chonabayashi Laura Bakkensen.
A comparison of North Atlantic storms in HiGEM, HadGEM and ERA-40 Jennifer Catto – University of Reading Supervisors: Len Shaffrey Warwick Norton Acknowledgement:
Jennifer Catto Supervisors: Len Shaffrey – NCAS Climate and Kevin Hodges - ESSC The Representation of Extratropical Cyclones in HiGEM.
Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change – PhD Project Results from HiGEM High Resolution Climate Model Ray Bell Supervisors – Prof. Pier Luigi Vidale, Dr.
Atlantic Hurricanes and Climate Change: Modeling Studies Hurricane Katrina, Aug GFDL model simulation of Atlantic hurricane activity Tom Knutson.
Jennifer Catto Supervisors: Len Shaffrey and Kevin Hodges Extra-tropical cyclones in HiGEM.
Tropical Cyclones - genesis depends on ocean conditions - huge removal of heat energy from ocean - damage primarily from storm surge caused by strong.
28 August 2006Steinhausen meeting Hamburg On the integration of weather and climate prediction Lennart Bengtsson.
Dynamically simulated tropical storms in a changing climate and their impact on the assessment of future climate risk Ray Bell Supervisors – Prof. Pier.
+ Effects of Climate Change on Ocean Storms Chloe Mawer.
Climate Forecasting Unit Prediction of climate extreme events at seasonal and decadal time scale Aida Pintó Biescas.
NSF Hurricane Research National Science Foundation Pamela Stephens Geosciences Directorate.
High Resolution Climate Modelling in NERC (and the Met Office) Len Shaffrey, University of Reading Thanks to: Pier Luigi Vidale, Jane Strachan, Dave Stevens,
Bias Corrections of Storm Counts from Best Track Data Chris Landsea, National Hurricane Center, Miami, USA Gabe Vecchi, Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Lab,
Using Physics to Generate Tropical Cyclone Event Catalogs Kerry Emanuel and Sai Ravela Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
R. Met. Soc. 15. March 2006 Lennart Bengtsson ESSC, Reading, University Tropical eddies in a future climate Lennart Bengtsson ESSC, University Reading.
Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change: An Assessment WMO Expert Team on Climate Change Impacts on Tropical Cyclones February 2010 World Weather Research.
10-14 Aug 2009, ICTP, Trieste Workshop on "High-Resolution Climate Modeling" Lennart Bengtsson Tropical and extra-tropical cyclones in high resolution.
Decadal Variations of Intense Typhoon Activity Johnny Chan CityU-IAP Laboratory for Atmospheric Science Laboratory for Atmospheric Research Dept. of Physics.
Downscaling Tropical Cyclones from global re-analysis: Statistics of multi-decadal variability of TC activity in E Asia, Hans von Storch and.
WMO, Geneva Tropical cyclones in a warmer climate - a modeling study- Professor Lennart Bengtsson Max Planck Institute for Meteorology ESSC, University.
Hurricane-Climate Research of Relevance to RPSEA NCAR Earth System Laboratory National Center for Atmospheric Research NCAR is Sponsored by NSF and this.
Page 1© Crown copyright 2006 Matt Huddleston With thanks to: Frederic Vitart (ECMWF), Ruth McDonald & Met Office Seasonal forecasting team 14 th March.
MMM (NCAR) ESSL Tropical Cyclone Activity in the Caribbean: Is it Increasing? Summary: Summary of Past Hurricane Activity Issues on Data Reliability Attribution.
Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change in a High Resolution General Circulation Model, HiGEM Ray Bell Supervisors: Prof. Pier Luigi Vidale, Dr. Kevin Hodges.
Hurricanes and Climate Change: Implications for New England Amanda Staudt, Ph.D. National Wildlife Federation July 11, 2008 Northeast Hurricane Mitigation.
GLOBAL WARMING AND TROPICAL CYCLONE INTENSITY (Large changes already occurring or small changes decades from now?) Based on “Statement on Tropical Cyclones.
Impact of global warming on tropical cyclone structure change with a 20-km-mesh high-resolution global model Hiroyuki Murakami (AESTO/MRI, Japan) Akio.
The role of the eastern tropical Pacific on typhoon activity associated with different types of El Niño Ray Bell Supervisors: Prof. P.L. Vidale, Dr. Kevin.
The Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, Climate Change, and Atlantic Hurricanes Michael E. Mann Department of Meteorology/Earth and Environmental Systems.
Research Needs for Decadal to Centennial Climate Prediction: From observations to modelling Julia Slingo, Met Office, Exeter, UK & V. Ramaswamy. GFDL,
Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change in a High Resolution General Circulation Model, HiGEM Ray Bell Supervisors: Prof. P.L. Vidale, Dr. Kevin Hodges and.
© Crown copyright Met Office Examining changes in tropical cyclones over Vietnam using a five member RCM ensemble Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 8 th – 11 th.
Lennart Bengtsson ESSC, Uni. Reading THORPEX Conference December 2004 Predictability and predictive skill of weather systems and atmospheric flow patterns.
High Resolution Modeling of the Response of Tropical Cyclones to Climate Change Kerry Emanuel Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Global Climate is Changing Now. More Intense Precipitation Events & Flooding in Northeast Observed Change in Very Heavy Precipitation Observed U.S. Flooding.
Global Climate Change: Past and Future Le Moyne College Syracuse, New York February 3, 2006 Department of Meteorology and Earth and Environmental Systems.
Global Climate Change: Past and Future 2006 Scott Margolin Lecture in Environmental Affairs Middlebury College Middlebury VT March 7, 2006 Michael E. Mann.
Ryan N. Maue Research Meteorologist WeatherBELL Analytics October 30, 2015 Global Tropical Cyclones.
Decadal Climate Prediction Project (DCPP) © Crown copyright 09/2015 | Met Office and the Met Office logo are registered trademarks Met Office FitzRoy Road,
Coupled and Uncoupled Model Simulation of the Global ENSO-TC Teleconnection Ray Bell With thanks to Kevin Hodges, Pier Luigi Vidale, Jane Strachan and.
Using Physics to Assess Hurricane Risk Kerry Emanuel Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Statement on Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change Purpose: “The Sixth Workshop was attended by 125 delegates from 34 different countries and regions. The.
Climate Change & Tropical Cyclones Current Weather Finish Extreme Weather Tropical Cyclone Review Broader Context of Tropical Cyclones Previous Debates.
ESSL Holland, Hawaii On the Changing Characteristics of Atlantic Hurricanes Summary: Atlantic Changes and Relationship to SST Natural Variability.
Changes in Tropical Cyclone Number, Duration, and Intensity in a Warming Environment by P. J. Webster, G. J. Holland, J. A. Curry, and H.-R. Chang Science.
WWRP 1 THORPEX-WCRP Collaborations and other climate relevant activities of the WWRP WCRP/JSC31 WMO/WWRP/THORPEX
Dust modelling in HiGAM Presentation for HiGEM meeting, Reading 31 st Jan 2008 Margaret Woodage Environmental Systems Science Centre University of Reading,
A proposition on Seasonal Prediction of TC Activity over western North Pacific H. Joe Kwon Kongju National University, KOREA.
ESSL Holland, CCSM Workshop 0606 Predicting the Earth System Across Scales: Both Ways Summary:Rationale Approach and Current Focus Improved Simulation.
Climate Change & Tropical Cyclones Current Weather Finish Extreme Weather Tropical Cyclone Review Broader Context of Tropical Cyclones Previous Debates.
Seasonal and decadal prediction. Ocean Assimilation and Reanalysis for Climate Research Head of Group : Keith Haines Maria Valdivieso da Costa (NCEO)
Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change in a High Resolution General Circulation Model, HiGEM Ray Bell Supervisors: Prof. Pier Luigi Vidale, Dr. Kevin Hodges.
Global Climate Change: Past and Future
Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science
Tropical Cyclones and Climate Change in a High Resolution General Circulation Model, HiGEM Ray Bell Supervisors: Prof. Pier Luigi Vidale, Dr. Kevin Hodges.
Climate Change & Tropical Cyclones
PRIMAVERA model evaluation aims and plan
Presentation transcript:

‘Dynamically simulated tropic storms in a changing climate and their impact on the assessment of future climate risk’ - PhD project Ray Bell Supervisors – Prof. Pier Luigi Vidale, Dr. Jane Strachan and Dr. Kevin Hodges

MOcean (Hons) – NOCS. Dissertation – Wind and wave variability in re-analysis and satellite measurements Met office placement 2010 Waves team – wave ensemble system About me

Impacts on the climate system, removing heat and moisture from the ocean affecting large scale circulation Socio-economic impacts Associated risk with climate change Katrina Current damage $91.5bn (ICAT, 2011) Motivation

Does dynamically simulated TC activity (location, frequency, intensity, structure and energetics) change in model simulations including anthropogenic forcing? Will the predictability of TC variability based on natural climate variability of large scale atmospheric modes break down under anthropogenic climate change? PhD outline

HiGEM (N144, 1/3 o ocean) - Higher resolution can resolve TCs better, important for intensity (Bengtsson et al, 2007) TRACK (Hodges) to indentify and track TCs Compare TCs in the transient run to the control run PhD project

Natural variability vs. Climate change (Webster et al, 2005; Pielke et al, 2005) Consensus on decreasing frequency globally (McDonald et al, 2005; Yamada et al, 2010) however contrasting regional changes Possible stronger winds (Bengtsson et al, 2007) Increasing GCM resolution... Increase in rainfall (Knutson et al, 2010) Previous studies

MSc modules (>50% of my time) Reading lists – Structure and dynamics, natural variability, climate change Tracking HiGAM data (developing TRACK, Linux and IDL skills) Work done so far

HiGAM 1979 Min mslp

Typhoon track

Reading – Natural variability, climate change 1 st chapter finished by October TRACK stats Tracking the HiGEM transient runs – compare to control runs and re-analysis/obs (Jane) CMIP5 data? Air-sea interaction? Future work

Collaborations Username: metoffice Password: metoffice_tc

References Bengtsson, L., Hodges, K. I., and Esch, M. (2007). Tropical cyclones in a T159 resolution global climate model: comparison with observations and re-analysis. Tellus A, 59, 396–416. Knutson, T. R., McBridge, J. L., Chan, J., Emanuel, K., Holland, G., Landsea, C., Held, I., Kossin, J. P., Srivastava, A. K., and Sugi, M. (2010). Tropical cyclones and climate change. Nat. Geosci., 3, 157–163. McDonald, R., Bleaken, D., Creswell, D., Pop e, V., and Senior, C. (2005). Tropical storms: representation and diagnosis in climate models and the impacts of climate change. J. Climate, 18, 1275–1262. Pielke, R. A. J., Landsea, C., Mayfield, M., Laver, J., and Pasch, R. (2005). Hurricanes and global warming. Bul l. Amer. Meteorol. Soc., 86, 1571–1575. Webster, P., Holland, G., Curry, J., and Chang, H.-R. (2005). Changes in tropical cyclone number, duration, and intensity in a warming environment. Science, 309, 1844– Questions ???