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Increasing contribution of the atmospheric vertical motion to precipitation in a warming climate

Earth Sciences

Increasing contribution of the atmospheric vertical motion to precipitation in a warming climate

T. Jun and D. Rind

This groundbreaking research by Tackseung Jun and David Rind reveals how global warming is reshaping precipitation patterns. Utilizing a cutting-edge atmospheric moisture model, the study uncovers the complexities of extreme heavy rainfall in a warming climate, shedding light on the dynamic processes that lead to an intensified hydrological cycle. Dive into the details of how our world's weather may change by the end of the century!

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Global warming already influences precipitation, with more intense precipitation in many locations. Although the 'wet-get-wetter, dry-get-drier' tendency in mean precipitation holds in many locations, the situations for precipitation extremes are more complex, due to changes in dynamic and thermodynamic influences on atmospheric moisture distributions. Here, we build a dynamically interactive atmospheric moisture model for the present (2006–2025) and the future climate (2081–2100), using outputs from coupled ocean-atmosphere general circulation models. We find that the dynamic process of vertical advection of moisture dominates the same-day precipitation, while the smaller impact of the thermodynamic process provides available moisture for several days. As climate warms, we find that the dynamical-induced precipitation more completely exhausts the vertically-integrated moisture and the distribution of the dynamic process's impact on precipitation exhibits a greater spread in the warmer future. The dynamical process is primarily responsible for more extreme heavy precipitation as climate warms, at all latitudes.
Publisher
Communications Earth & Environment
Published On
Sep 30, 2024
Authors
Tackseung Jun, David Rind
Tags
global warming
precipitation patterns
extreme weather
atmospheric moisture
climate change
dynamically-induced precipitation
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