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  3. Are Greenhouse Gas Signals of Northern Hemisphere winter extra-tropical cyclone activity dependent on the identification and tracking algorithm?
 

Are Greenhouse Gas Signals of Northern Hemisphere winter extra-tropical cyclone activity dependent on the identification and tracking algorithm?

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.47712
Date of Publication
2013
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Physikalisches Instit...

Contributor
Ulbrich, Uwe
Leckebusch, Gregor C.
Grieger, Jens
Schuster, Mareike
Akperov, Mirseid G.
Bardin, Mikhail Yu.
Feng, Yang
Gulev, Sergey
Inatsu, Masaru
Keay, Kevin
Kew, Sarah F.
Liberato, Margarida L. R.
Lionello, Piero
Mokhov, Igor I.
Neu, Urs
Pinto, Joaquim G.
Raible, Christophorcid-logo
Physikalisches Institut, Klima- und Umweltphysik (KUP)
Physikalisches Institut
Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research (OCCR)
Reale, Marco
Rudeva, Irina
Simmonds, Ian
Tilinina, Natalia D.
Trigo, Isabel F.
Ulbrich, Sven
Wang, Xiaolan L.
Wernli, Heini
Subject(s)

500 - Science::530 - ...

500 - Science::550 - ...

Series
Meteorologische Zeitschrift
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0941-2948
Publisher
Borntraeger
Language
en
Publisher DOI
10.1127/0941-2948/2013/0420
Description
For Northern Hemisphere extra-tropical cyclone activity, the dependency of a potential anthropogenic climate change signal on the identification method applied is analysed. This study investigates the impact of the used algorithm on the changing signal, not the robustness of the climate change signal itself. Using one single transient AOGCM simulation as standard input for eleven state-of-the-art identification methods, the patterns of model simulated present day climatologies are found to be close to those computed from re-analysis, independent of the method applied. Although differences in the total number of cyclones identified exist, the climate change signals (IPCC SRES A1B) in the model run considered are largely similar between methods for all cyclones. Taking into account all tracks, decreasing numbers are found in the Mediterranean, the Arctic in the Barents and Greenland Seas, the mid-latitude Pacific and North America. Changing patterns are even more similar, if only the most severe systems are considered: the methods reveal a coherent statistically significant increase in frequency over the eastern North Atlantic and North Pacific. We found that the differences between the methods considered are largely due to the different role of weaker systems in the specific methods.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/118706
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