Revisiting the surface-energy-flux perspective on the sensitivity of global precipitation to climate change

被引:0
|
作者
Nicholas Siler
Gerard H. Roe
Kyle C. Armour
Nicole Feldl
机构
[1] Oregon State University,College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Science
[2] University of Washington,Department of Earth and Space Sciences
[3] University of Washington,Department of Atmospheric Sciences, School of Oceanography
[4] University of California,Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
[5] Santa Cruz,undefined
来源
Climate Dynamics | 2019年 / 52卷
关键词
Hydrologic cycle; Global warming;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Climate models simulate an increase in global precipitation at a rate of approximately 1–3% per Kelvin of global surface warming. This change is often interpreted through the lens of the atmospheric energy budget, in which the increase in global precipitation is mostly offset by an increase in net radiative cooling. Other studies have provided different interpretations from the perspective of the surface, where evaporation represents the turbulent transfer of latent heat to the atmosphere. Expanding on this surface perspective, here we derive a version of the Penman–Monteith equation that allows the change in ocean evaporation to be partitioned into a thermodynamic response to surface warming, and additional diagnostic contributions from changes in surface radiation, ocean heat uptake, and boundary-layer dynamics/relative humidity. In this framework, temperature is found to be the primary control on the rate of increase in global precipitation within model simulations of greenhouse gas warming, while the contributions from changes in surface radiation and ocean heat uptake are found to be secondary. The temperature contribution also dominates the spatial pattern of global evaporation change, leading to the largest fractional increases at high latitudes. In the surface energy budget, the thermodynamic increase in evaporation comes at the expense of the sensible heat flux, while radiative changes cause the sensible heat flux to increase. These tendencies on the sensible heat flux partly offset each other, resulting in a relatively small change in the global mean, and contributing to an impression that global precipitation is radiatively constrained.
引用
收藏
页码:3983 / 3995
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Solar Energy and Global Climate Change
    Lin, Jialin
    Qian, Taotao
    MATERIALS RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS, PTS 1-3, 2014, 875-877 : 1767 - 1770
  • [32] ENERGY AND THE TEACHING OF GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE
    McGowan, Alan H.
    7TH INTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGY, EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE (INTED2013), 2013, : 3973 - 3977
  • [33] A New Perspective on Combating Global Climate Change
    Liu, Lei
    TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS REVIEW, 2010, 2 (01) : 76 - 81
  • [34] The gender perspective in climate change and global health
    Preet, Raman
    Nilsson, Maria
    Schumann, Barbara
    Evengard, Birgitta
    GLOBAL HEALTH ACTION, 2010, 3
  • [35] Climate change and perspective: Local and global views on problems and solutions in climate change
    White, Jessica
    Foy, Gregory
    Peterman, Keith
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2018, 255
  • [36] Revisiting a Constraint on Equilibrium Climate Sensitivity From a Last Millennium Perspective
    Cropper, S.
    Thackeray, C. W.
    Emile-Geay, J.
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2023, 50 (20)
  • [37] Fuel moisture sensitivity to temperature and precipitation: climate change implications
    M. D. Flannigan
    B. M. Wotton
    G. A. Marshall
    W. J. de Groot
    J. Johnston
    N. Jurko
    A. S. Cantin
    Climatic Change, 2016, 134 : 59 - 71
  • [38] Extreme value theory for precipitation: sensitivity analysis for climate change
    Katz, RW
    ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 1999, 23 (02) : 133 - 139
  • [39] Fuel moisture sensitivity to temperature and precipitation: climate change implications
    Flannigan, M. D.
    Wotton, B. M.
    Marshall, G. A.
    de Groot, W. J.
    Johnston, J.
    Jurko, N.
    Cantin, A. S.
    CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2016, 134 (1-2) : 59 - 71
  • [40] Global energy dilemmas: energy security and climate change
    Huber, Matt
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, 2016, 16 (01) : 271 - 272