Open Access System for Information Sharing

Login Library

 

Article
Cited 87 time in webofscience Cited 137 time in scopus
Metadata Downloads

Evaluation of multiple regional climate models for summer climate extremes over East Asia SCIE SCOPUS

Title
Evaluation of multiple regional climate models for summer climate extremes over East Asia
Authors
Park, CMin, SKLee, DCha, DHSuh, MSKang, HSHong, SYLee, DKBaek, HJBoo, KOKwon, WT
Date Issued
2016-04
Publisher
SPRINGER
Abstract
In this study, five regional climate models (RCMs) participating in the CORDEX-East Asia project (HadGEM3-RA, RegCM4, SNU-MM5, SNU-WRF, and YSU-RSM) are evaluated in terms of their performances in simulating the climatology of summer extremes in East Asia. Seasonal maxima of daily mean temperature and precipitation are analyzed using the generalized extreme value method. RCMs show systematic bias patterns in both seasonal means and extremes. A cold bias is located along the coast, whereas a warm bias occurs in northern China. Overall, wet bias occurs in East Asia, but with a substantial dry bias centered in South Korea. This dry bias appears to be related to the colder ocean surface around South Korea, positioning the monsoonal front further south compared to observations. Taylor diagram analyses reveal that the models simulate temperature means more accurately compared to extremes because of the higher spatial correlation, whereas precipitation extremes are simulated better than their means because of the higher spatial variability. The latter implies that extreme rainfall events can be captured more accurately by RCMs compared to the driving GCM despite poorer simulation of mean rainfall. Inter-RCM analysis indicates a close relationship between the means and extremes in terms of model skills, but it does not show a clear relationship between temperature and precipitation. Sub-regional analysis largely supports the mean-extreme skill relationship. Analyses of frequency and intensity distributions of daily data for three selected sub-regions suggest that overall shifts of temperature distribution and biases in moderate-heavy precipitations contribute importantly to the seasonal mean biases.
URI
https://oasis.postech.ac.kr/handle/2014.oak/36038
DOI
10.1007/S00382-015-2713-Z
ISSN
0930-7575
Article Type
Article
Citation
CLIMATE DYNAMICS, vol. 46, no. 7-8, page. 2469 - 2486, 2016-04
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.

qr_code

  • mendeley

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

Related Researcher

Views & Downloads

Browse