Extreme Precipitation in a Changing Climate
A special issue of Climate (ISSN 2225-1154).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 March 2023) | Viewed by 6442
Special Issue Editors
Interests: weather and climate extremes; precipitation extremes; decadal variability and predictability; climate change
Interests: atmospheric general circulation; short term extremes in present and future climate; climate model simulation of short term extremes; dynamic meteorology
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Extreme precipitation events can potentially result into catastrophic events like flash flooding, fluvial flooding, landslides, damage to infrastructure and ecosystems, etc. observed in the recent decades over various parts of the world. Such events not only cause huge economic losses but also result in loss of human lives. Therefore, accurate and reliable predictions of extreme precipitation events are a necessary first step to mitigate the damages caused. Studies indicate that the global hydrological cycle has changed over the last decades, leading to more intense and more frequent precipitation, in response to an increase in global temperature mainly driven by anthropogenic activities. These changes in the global hydrological cycle and consequent changes in intensity, duration and frequency of extreme precipitation are expected to continue in the future. However, the extreme precipitation response to human activities is complex due to multiple processes involved over a broad range of space and time scales. Therefore, local precipitation response is not uniform across spatial and temporal scales. Even at a one location, the responses of both the short and long duration precipitation are different. This issue is also more complicated due to the: lack of reliable long term high resolution global observational data and systematic model biases. The low signal-to-noise ratio due to factors such as chaotic weather and large internal variability of the climate system makes the inference challenging.
In this special issue we invite contributions in the form of original research articles, communications, and review articles addressing the following, but not limited to, areas of research:
- Statistics of precipitation extremes in observations, reanalyses, and regional and global climate models.
- Projected changes in the statistics of extreme precipitation and its indices such as those defined by Expert Team on Climate Change Detection and Indices (ETCCDI).
- Research on process-based understanding of precipitation extremes in current and future climate. Processes could include synoptic elements: e.g., tropical cyclones; mesoscale elements: e.g., thunderstorms; down to cloud microphysics.
- Predictability and prediction of extreme precipitation events.
- Detection and attribution studies
Dr. Abhishekh Srivastava
Prof. Dr. Richard Grotjahn
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- extreme precipitation
- predictability of extreme precipitation
- ETCCDI indices
- extreme value statistics
- detection and attribution
- climate change
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