Characterization of the Global Hydrologic Cycle from a Back-Trajectory Analysis of Atmospheric Water Vapor Paul A. Dirmeyer Kaye L. Brubaker 04 / 15 /

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
AGENZIA REGIONALE PER LA PROTEZIONE DELLAMBIENTE DELLA SARDEGNA ARPAS Andrea Motroni Climate, climate change and desertification.
Advertisements

Global Precipitation Precipitation averages just about 1 meter per year over Earth but, like wealth, varies widely from place to place and from time to.
Regional climate change over southern South America: evolution of mean climate and extreme events Silvina A. Solman CIMA (CONICET-UBA) Buenos Aires ARGENTINA.
Spatio-temporal analysis of source-sink pairs of precipitation supply in the Amazon River basin Arief Sudradjat, Kaye L. Brubaker, Paul A. Dirmeyer Acknowledgment:
Climate Change Impacts on the Water Cycle Emmanouil Anagnostou Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering Environmental Engineering Program UCONN.
Jiangfeng Wei Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies Maryland, USA.
Class #7: Thursday, July 15 Global wind systems Chapter 10 1Class #7, Thursday, July 15, 2010.
Weather & Climate. As a class, brainstorm the meanings of the words weather and climate and some examples of both. Write down your responses in the space.
Last time… Key questions 1.Why does air move? 2.Are movements of winds random across Earth’s surface, or do they follow regular patterns? 3.Implications.
Focus on the Terrestrial Cryosphere Cold land areas where water is either seasonally or permanently frozen. Terrestrial Cryosphere 0.25 m Frost Penetration.
Part 6. Current, Past, and Future Climates
Coupling Strength between Soil Moisture and Precipitation Tunings and the Land-Surface Database Ecoclimap Experiment design: Two 10-member ensembles -
Outline Further Reading: Chapter 11 of the text book - dry and moist subtropical climate regimes - mediterranean regimes - dry mid-latitude and moist continental.
Diagnosis of North American Hydroclimate Variability in IPCC’s Climate Simulations Alfredo Ruiz–Barradas 1 and Sumant Nigam University of Maryland ----o----
1 Valley Breeze Example ©1997 Prentice-Hall, Inc..
Earth’s Climate and Vegetation
Class #12: Thursday, July 22 Climate types Chapter 17 1Class #12, Thursday, July 22.
Paul A. Dirmeyer Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies, Calverton, Maryland, USA Kaye L. Brubaker Dept. Civil and Environmental Eng., University of.
Warm-Up What is the Coriolis Effect? How does it affect air currents on Earth? What causes the seasons? (Why is it hot in the summer and cold in the.
Climate Introduction to
Climate.
Climate Climate is the long-term pattern of the weather. Whereas, weather is just what’s happening here, now. (Rain, sun, snow, cold, hot, etc.) Climate.
Atmospheric Circulation in a nutshell Hot air rises (rains a lot) in the tropics Air cools and sinks in the subtropics (deserts) Poleward-flow is deflected.
Lecture 6: The Hydrologic Cycle EarthsClimate_Web_Chapter.pdfEarthsClimate_Web_Chapter.pdf, p. 10, 16-17, 21, 31-32, 34.
Heat Transfer in Earth’s Oceans WOW!, 3 meters of ocean water can hold as much energy as all other Earth Systems combined!
1 Istanbul Technical University / Civil Engineering Department Ercan Kahya Istanbul Technical University.
Harry Williams, Earth Science1 CLIMATIC REGIONS Climate = "Long-term average weather, including an indication of temperature levels, rainfall totals and.
Earth’s Climate. Examine pages 456 and 457 in your text. From the data presented in the images and you knowledge of air movement, the atmosphere, and.
Climate of the world © 2014 wheresjenny.com Climate of the world.
The Geography of World Studies World Studies. Review from last year  Definition of geography  The scientific study of the location of people and activities.
The day on which the sun’s rays shine directly overhead at noon at either the Tropic of Cancer or the Tropic of Capricorn. Marks the beginning of winter.
Weather Temporary behavior of atmosphere (what’s going on at any certain time) Small geographic area Can change rapidly.
Earth's Atmosphere Troposphere- the layer closest to Earth's surface extending roughly 16 km (10 miles) above Earth. Densest – N, O, & water vapor Stratosphere-
Monsoon Meteorology ATS 553. Monsoon: A reversal of the wind direction at the surface, usually accompanied by the change in the precipitation regime,
AOSC 200 Lesson 14. Oceanography The oceans plat three important roles in determining weather and climate (1) They are the major source of water vapor.
Climate of North America 101 What are the major controls on North American climate? What is the dominant flow pattern across North America in winter? How.
RESULTS OF RESEARCH RELATED TO CHARIS IN KAZAKHSTAN I. Severskiy, L. Kogutenko.
GEU 0027: Meteorology Lecture 10 Wind: Global Systems.
Precipitation source/sink connections between the Amazon and La Plata River basins A Sudradjat*, K L Brubaker**, P A Dirmeyer*** Abstract This study examines.
Objective Data  The outlined square marks the area of the study arranged in most cases in a coarse 24X24 grid.  Data from the NASA Langley Research Center.
Global Climates and Biomes
Renata Gonçalves Tedeschi Alice Marlene Grimm Universidade Federal do Paraná, Curitiba, Paraná 1. OBJECTIVES 1)To asses the influence of ENSO on the frequency.
Atmospheric circulation
Contributions of Water Vapor and Temperature to the Interannual Variability of Precipitation: An Evaluation from North American Regional Reanalysis Er.
Typical Distributions of Water Characteristics in the Oceans.
World Geography Climates Climates of the world. Warm up List as many climates as you can think of.
What is it?.  Climate is the name for the general conditions of temperature and precipitation for an area over a long period of time.
Regional Patterns of Climate Change Kenneth Hunu & Bali White EESC W4400 Dynamics of Climate Variability and Climate Change December 5, 2006.
Surface Net SW Radiation Latitude Clouds Albedo Source Reanalysis for
Salinity and Density Differences VERTICAL STRUCTURE, THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION & WATER MASSES.
Climate By Ms. Maggard org/climate.htm.
Changes in the South American Monsoon and potential regional impacts L. Carvalho, C. Jones, B. Bookhagan, D. Lopez-Carr UCSB, USA A.Posadas, R. Quiroz.
NAME SWG th Annual NOAA Climate Diagnostics and Prediction Workshop State College, Pennsylvania Oct. 28, 2005.
Earth-Sun Relationships Climate & Weather. Earth-Sun Relationships Climate and Weather Weather is the condition of the atmosphere at a specific time.
Air Masses and ITCZ. Topic 4: Air Masses and ITCZ Global wind circulation and ocean currents are important in determining climate patterns. These are.
Chapter 4 Global Climates and Biomes. Global Processes Determine Weather and Climate Weather- the short term conditions of the atmosphere in a local area.
Fact Statements.  Surface currents are mainly caused by prevailing winds.  Their flow is controlled by the winds, Earth’s rotation and location of the.
Latitudinal effects Intensity of insolation is not the same at all latitudes Earth is roughly spherical, so insolation passing through 1 m 2 screen –Illuminates.
Chapter 2 Climate. Weather: the combination of temperature, humidity, precipitation, wind, cloudiness, and other atmospheric condition occurring at a.
Biodiversity total number of species within an ecosystem and the resulting complexities of interactions among them Biomes all of the life-supporting regions.
World Geography Chapter 3
H11A-0830: Precipitation source/sink connections between the Amazon and La Plata River basins A Sudradjat*, K L Brubaker**, P A Dirmeyer*** Abstract This.
Earth Science Chapter 8 Climates.
Climate vs Weather.
Daylength Local Mesoscale Winds Chinook Winds (Foehn) Loma, MT: January 15, 1972, the temperature rose from -54 to 49°F (-48 to 9°C), a 103°F (58°C)
Question 1 Given that the globe is warming, why does the DJF outlook favor below-average temperatures in the southeastern U. S.? Climate variability on.
Lecture 6: The Hydrologic Cycle
Chapter 9: Insolation Control of Monsoons
General Atmospheric Circulation
Climates of the Earth Ch. 3: Climates of the Earth
Presentation transcript:

Characterization of the Global Hydrologic Cycle from a Back-Trajectory Analysis of Atmospheric Water Vapor Paul A. Dirmeyer Kaye L. Brubaker 04 / 15 / 2008

Recycling Ratio Definition: the fraction of precipitation over a defined area that originated as evapotranspiration from that same area, with no intervening cycles of precipitation or surface evapotranspiration. The recycling ratio is a diagnostic measure of the potential for interactions between land surface hydrology and regional climate. A change in regional evapotranspiration affects not only the supply of water carried by the circulation of the atmosphere, but can thermodynamically alter the atmosphere itself.

Bulk Methods The bulk approach assumes that locally evaporated and externally advected moisture are well mixed in the air over the region of interest. One major drawback: contain an atmospheric moisture flux term at the lateral boundaries defined as the product of two time-mean quantities — wind and humidity In actuality, perturbational expansion yields nonlinear term can be quite significant and has much of its signal on the time scale of synoptic waves.

Another drawback: must be calculated over predefined volumes using the wind and humidity information along the boundaries. Fine for calculating a single value over a large area, but difficult to produce a continuous map over a continent or the globe. The most direct way of estimating recycling is to track the water vapor in the air from source (evapotranspiration) to sink (precipitation). (Isotopic Analysis) Tracer modeling drawback: adds to the computational cost; any changes require a complete reintegration of the general circulation model; errors in the model climate contribute errors in the estimates of the hydrologic cycle. Other Methods

Back-Trajectory Analysis Methodology This approach uses a quasi-isentropic calculation of trajectories of water vapor backward in time (QIBT) from observed precipitation events, using atmospheric reanalysis to provide meteorological data for estimating the altitude, advection, and incremental contribution of evaporation to the water participating in each precipitation event. It relies on the use of high-time-resolution (daily or shorter) precipitation and meteorological data to include the effects of transients on the transport of water vapor.

 Chose an interval of 45 min to ensure statistical stability of results at minimum computational expense.  Trajectories are calculated first backward then forward and the average is taken to minimize the impact of interpolation errors in rapidly evolving or highly rotational flows.  Assume that the diabatic processes approximately balance out along the path between the highly diabatic surface evaporation and terminal precipitation events.  Assume that the water evaporated from the surface mixes uniformly through the atmospheric column within the period of the time step Fig 1. Schematic of (a) the division of precipitation over a pentad into increments of equal amount to be assigned to advected parcels; (b) the launching of parcels at random x – y locations and elevations of a humidity-weighted vertical coordinate over a grid box (humidity indicated by the curve labeled q); (c) the apportionment of water vapor in a parcel from a precipitation event to evaporation during earlier time intervals along the isentropic back- trajectory path.

Fig. 3. The scaling regression curves from all test regions, and (bold) the curve through the arithmetic mean of the recycling ratios at each scale. Fig. 2. Estimated recycling ratios as a function of area from subregions over three of the test regions from Table 1, the average values for each scale (filled squares), and the best-fit regression line through the average values.

 Areas of high terrain tend to stand out as having high recycling ratios. This may be an artifact of the combination of low precipitable water and high warm-season reanalysis evaporation rates over these regions.  Relative minima in regions with strong advection from adjacent waters.  Recycling appears to be relatively high over much of South America south of the Amazon River all the way through the La Plata basin, etc.

Unshaded areas in seasonal maps occur over deserts where no precipitation is reported in the multiyear analysis. Recycling ratios are higher during the local warm or wet season, and lower in winter or the dry season. Robust recycling ratios at high northern latitudes are a spring and summer phenomenon.

The high-latitude regions of the Northern Hemisphere, especially in the Pacific region, show a very strong annual cycle. Areas of elevated terrain also show large magnitudes of the annual cycle. There are also isolated extrema in the arid regions of northern Africa and southwestern Asia, which is an artifact of the rare sporadic rain events in the region leading to statistically unstable estimates.

At lower latitudes, high values in arid regions and low in the deep Tropics. Large mean and seasonal variability signals at high northern latitudes are not evident at interannual time scales. Strong signals mainly in the dry regions in the subtropics and midlatitudes that lie outside the rainbelts for a given season. COV seems to be largest during the dry season in regimes of strong seasonal precipitation, consistent with an erratic evaporation response dependent on the availability of moisture from the previous season ’ s rainfall.

A patchy distribution of weak but significant positive trends during boreal winter over Canada and the northern United States. In boreal spring there is a broad region of strong increases in recycling over Canada, Alaska, Fennoscandia,and the Arctic coast of eastern Siberia, with sporadic small regions of positive and negative trends elsewhere. The high-latitude positive trends are consistent with the warming and extended growing season trends in these areas.

For most of the globe, the QIBT recycling exceeds the bulk recycling. Over most midlatitude regions, the difference is less than 70% of the bulk value; however, in locations where the bulk recycling is quite low, such as the Saharain SON, the QIBT estimate is more than double the bulk estimate. Notable exceptions, where the QIBT estimate is lower than the bulk estimate, are northern South America (all seasons) and equatorial Africa(DJF).

Conclusions Overall, the 25-yr global average recycling ratio for the 10 5 km 2 spatial extent is 4.5%. On both an annual and a seasonal basis, minima of recycling are observed in regions with strong advection from adjacent waters. The overall patterns are similar, compared with those derived using a bulk method, in terms of the locations of minima and maxima, although there are differences in magnitude and detail. Regions with strong interannual variability in recycling do not correspond directly to regions with strong intra-annual variability.