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Pitfalls in diagnosing temperature extremes

Earth Sciences

Pitfalls in diagnosing temperature extremes

L. Brunner and A. Voigt

In the face of human-induced climate change, extreme temperatures are on the rise. Research by Lukas Brunner and Aiko Voigt uncovers biases in traditional methods of measuring these extremes, leading to underestimations of heatwaves. Their proposed solution could reshape how we understand and predict climate extremes.... show more
Abstract
Worsening temperature extremes are among the most severe impacts of human-induced climate change. These extremes are often defined as rare events that exceed a specific percentile threshold within the distribution of daily maximum temperature. The percentile-based approach is chosen to follow regional and seasonal temperature variations so that extremes can occur globally and in all seasons, and frequently uses a running seasonal window to increase the sample size for the threshold calculation. Here, we show that running seasonal windows as used in many studies in recent years introduce a time-, region-, and dataset-depended bias that can lead to a striking underestimation of the expected extreme frequency. We reveal that this bias arises from artificially mixing the mean seasonal cycle into the extreme threshold and propose a simple solution that essentially eliminates it. We then use the corrected extreme frequency as reference to show that the bias also leads to an overestimation of future heatwave changes by as much as 30% in some regions. Based on these results we stress that running seasonal windows should not be used without correction for estimating extremes and their impacts.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Mar 18, 2024
Authors
Lukas Brunner, Aiko Voigt
Tags
climate change
temperature extremes
heatwaves
bias correction
seasonal analysis
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