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APPLICATION IN CLIMATOLOGY 2: LONG-TERM TRENDS IN PERSISTENCE

APPLICATION IN CLIMATOLOGY 2: LONG-TERM TRENDS IN PERSISTENCE. Radan HUTH , Monika CAHYNOVÁ, Jan KYSELÝ. Hess &Brezowsky groups of types dashed: lifetime (persistence) smoothed DJF. Hess &Brezowsky groups of types dashed: lifetime (persistence) smoothed JJA.

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APPLICATION IN CLIMATOLOGY 2: LONG-TERM TRENDS IN PERSISTENCE

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  1. APPLICATIONIN CLIMATOLOGY 2: LONG-TERM TRENDS IN PERSISTENCE Radan HUTH, Monika CAHYNOVÁ, Jan KYSELÝ

  2. Hess&Brezowsky groups of types dashed: lifetime (persistence) smoothed DJF

  3. Hess&Brezowsky groups of types dashed: lifetime (persistence) smoothed JJA

  4. Hess&Brezowsky: groups of types with cyclonic / anticyclonic character over central Europe dashed: lifetime (persistence) smoothed

  5. Hess&Brezowsky: all types lifetime (persistence)

  6. Application in climatology 3: Links between circulation changes and climatic trends in Europe

  7. Outline • we want to assess the magnitude of climatic trends over Europe in 1961-2000 that can be linked to changing frequency of circulation types (as opposed to changing climatic properties of circulation types) • data • 29 stations from the ECA&D project, daily Tmax, Tmin, precipitation • 8 objective catalogues from cat.1.2 (CKMEANS, GWT, Litynski, LUND, P27, PETISCO, SANDRA, TPCA), each in 3 variants with 9, 18, 27 CTs • all COST733 domains except for D03 – lack of stations • methods • seasonal climatic trends from station data • proportion of climatic trends linked to circulation changes

  8. Stations

  9. Trends in the frequency of CTs Percentage of days occupied by CTs with trends in the seasonal frequency significant at the 95% level in 1961-2000

  10. Trends in the frequency of CTs Magnitude of significanttrends in frequency of CTs in GWTC10 (days per season in 1961-2000)

  11. trend significant at the 95% level Results – seasonal climatic trends

  12. Method to attribute climatic trends to changes in frequency of circulation types Ratio of “hypothetical” (circulation-induced) and observed long-term seasonal trends. The “hypothetical” trend is calculated from a daily series, constructed by assigning the long-term monthly mean of the given variable under the specific circulation type to each day. See e.g. Huth (2001).

  13. Ratio of circulation-induced (“hypothetical”) and observed trends 1961-2000 at stations where the observed trend is significant at the 95% level Results of 24 classifications on D00 and small domains

  14. Comparison of individual classifications Averages of individual stations where observed trends are significant at the 95% level Ratio of circulation-induced (“hypothetical”) and observed trends 1961-2000

  15. Conclusions • Significant trends in the frequency of CTs occur mostly in winter in domains 00 and 04 through 11, and also in summer in the Mediterranean. • Climatic trends can be only partly explained by the changing frequency of CTs, the link being the strongest in winter. In the other seasons, within-type climatic trends are responsible for a major part of the observed trends. • Classifications in the small domains are usually more tightly connected with climatic trends than those in D00, except for the northernmost stations. • There are large differences between results obtained with individual classifications – therefore all studies using just a limited number of them should be taken with a grain of salt.

  16. Application in climatology 4: Analysis of climate model outputs

  17. How to compare circulation types between two climates? • Isn’t it nonsense? We have just one climate... • Comparisons between • real climate and simulated present climate  model validation • simulated present and perturbed (typically future) climate  climate change response • real climate in two distinct periods (e.g., current vs. little ice age)

  18. “INSTRINSIC” TYPES OBS CTR

  19. OBSERVED TYPES projected onto CONTROL OBS OBS  CTR BUT: isn’t it an artefact of the projection?

  20. projection in the opposite “direction”: CONTROL TYPES projected onto OBSERVED CTR CTR  OBS

  21. How to compare circulation types between two climates? • (at least) four possible approaches 1. Find circulation types in each climate separately + you may get truly dominant types in both datasets (if you are lucky...) • no clear structure in data  types are to a certain extent random  comparison may be misleading

  22. How to compare circulation types between two climates? 2. Use types defined a priori, independently of the datasets objectivized catalogues types defined on a short(er) period + easy and fair comparison • may not reflect real structure in either dataset

  23. How to compare circulation types between two climates? 3. Concatenation of two datasets, “joint” classification performed simultaneously for the two climates (typically used with SOMs) +good compromise: types are likely to be close to ‘real’ types in both datasets

  24. How to compare circulation types between two climates? 4. Projection from one climate to the other and vice versa +wrong conclusions are eliminated

  25. Where to find it? References • Huth R. et al., 2008: Classifications of atmospheric circulation patterns: Recent advances and applications. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci.,1146, 105-152. ad 1) (heat waves) • Kyselý J., Huth R., 2008: Adv. Geosci.,14, 243-249. ad 2) (trends in persistence) • Kyselý J., Huth R., 2006: Theor. Appl. Climatol.,85, 19-36. • Cahynová M., Huth R., 2009: Tellus A,61, 407-416. ad 3) (climate change vs. circulation) • Huth R., 2001: Int. J. Climatol.,21, 135-153. • Cahynová M., Huth R., 2009: Theor. Appl. Climatol.,96, 57-68. ad 4) (analysis of GCM outputs) • Huth R., 1997: J. Climate,10, 1545-1561. • Huth R., 2000: Theor. Appl. Climatol.,67, 1-18.

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