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Assessing the contribution of multiple forcings to changes in temperature extremes 1981–2020 using CMIP6 climate models

Authors :
Mastawesha Misganaw Engdaw
Andrew Ballinger
Andrea K. Steiner
Gabriele C. Hegerl
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2021.

Abstract

In this study, we aim at quantifying the contribution of different forcings to changes in temperature extremes over 1981–2020 using CMIP6 climate model simulations. We first assess the changes in extreme hot and cold temperatures defined as days below 10% and above 90% of daily minimum temperature (TN10 and TN90) and daily maximum temperature (TX10 and TX90). We compute the change in percentage of extreme days per season for October-March (ONDJFM) and April-September (AMJJAS). Spatial and temporal trends are quantified using multi-model mean of all-forcings simulations. The same indices will be computed from aerosols-, greenhouse gases- and natural-only forcing simulations. The trends estimated from all-forcings simulations are then attributed to different forcings (aerosols-, greenhouse gases-, and natural-only) by considering uncertainties not only in amplitude but also in response patterns of climate models. The new statistical approach to climate change detection and attribution method by Ribes et al. (2017) is used to quantify the contribution of human-induced climate change. Preliminary results of the attribution analysis show that anthropogenic climate change has the largest contribution to the changes in temperature extremes in different regions of the world.Keywords: climate change, temperature, extreme events, attribution, CMIP6 Acknowledgement: This work was funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) under Research Grant W1256 (Doctoral Programme Climate Change: Uncertainties, Thresholds and Coping Strategies)

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f51a5d83d6440da761cf040a05a1972e