globalchange  > 气候变化事实与影响
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0363.1
Scopus记录号: 2-s2.0-85010888564
论文题名:
Seasonally resolved distributional trends of north american temperatures show contraction of winter variability
作者: Rhines A.; McKinnon K.A.; Tingley M.P.; Huybers P.
刊名: Journal of Climate
ISSN: 8948755
出版年: 2017
卷: 30, 期:3
起始页码: 1139
结束页码: 1157
语种: 英语
Scopus关键词: Atmospheric temperature ; Dynamics ; Surface properties ; Climate variability ; Reanalysis ; Statistical techniques ; Surface temperatures ; Winter/cool seasons ; Uncertainty analysis ; climate modeling ; regional climate ; seasonal variation ; surface temperature ; temperature anomaly ; trend analysis ; North America
英文摘要: There is considerable interest in determining whether recent changes in the temperature distribution extend beyond simple shifts in the mean. The authors present a framework based on quantile regression, wherein trends are estimated across percentiles. Pointwise trends from surface station observations are mapped into continuous spatial fields using thin-plate spline regression. This procedure allows for resolving spatial dependence of distributional trends, providing uncertainty estimates that account for spatial covariance and varying station density. The method is applied to seasonal near-surface temperatures between 1979 and 2014 to unambiguously assess distributional changes in the densely sampled North American region. Strong seasonal differences are found, with summer trends exhibiting significant warming throughout the domain with little distributional dependence, while the spatial distribution of spring and fall trends show a dipole structure. In contrast, the spread between the 95th and 5th percentile in winter has decreased, with trends of -0.71° and -0.85°C decade-1, respectively, for daily maximum and minimum temperature, a contraction that is statistically significant over 84% of the domain. This decrease in variability is dominated by warming of the coldest days, which has outpaced the median trend by approximately a factor of 4. Identical analyses using ERA-Interim and NCEP-2 yield consistent estimates for winter (though not for other seasons), suggesting that reanalyses can be reliably used for relating winter trends to circulation anomalies. These results are consistent with Arctic-amplified warming being strongest in winter and with the influence of synoptic-scale advection on winter temperatures. Maps for all percentiles, seasons, and datasets are provided via an online tool.
资助项目: NSF, Norsk Sykepleierforbund
Citation statistics:
资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/49749
Appears in Collections:气候变化事实与影响

Files in This Item:

There are no files associated with this item.


作者单位: Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States; National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO, United States; Departments of Statistics and Meteorology, The Pennsylvania State University, State CollegePA, United States; Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States

Recommended Citation:
Rhines A.,McKinnon K.A.,Tingley M.P.,et al. Seasonally resolved distributional trends of north american temperatures show contraction of winter variability[J]. Journal of Climate,2017-01-01,30(3)
Service
Recommend this item
Sava as my favorate item
Show this item's statistics
Export Endnote File
Google Scholar
Similar articles in Google Scholar
[Rhines A.]'s Articles
[McKinnon K.A.]'s Articles
[Tingley M.P.]'s Articles
百度学术
Similar articles in Baidu Scholar
[Rhines A.]'s Articles
[McKinnon K.A.]'s Articles
[Tingley M.P.]'s Articles
CSDL cross search
Similar articles in CSDL Cross Search
[Rhines A.]‘s Articles
[McKinnon K.A.]‘s Articles
[Tingley M.P.]‘s Articles
Related Copyright Policies
Null
收藏/分享
所有评论 (0)
暂无评论
 

Items in IR are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.