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Future changes in extreme precipitation indices over Korea SCIE SCOPUS

Title
Future changes in extreme precipitation indices over Korea
Authors
Gayoung KimDong-Hyun ChaChangyong ParkGil LeeChun-Sil JinDong-Kyou LeeMyoung-Seok SuhJoong-Bae AhnMIN, SEUNG KISong-You HongHyun-Suk Kang
Date Issued
2018-01
Publisher
WILEY-BLACKWELL
Abstract
In this study, the regional climate of the Korean Peninsula is dynamically downscaled using a high-resolution regional climate model forced by two representative concentration pathway scenarios of Hadley Centre Global Environmental Model version 2-Atmosphere and Ocean (HadGEM2-AO) using multiple regional climate models. Changes in extreme precipitation indices are investigated. Through the evaluation of the present climate, a multi-model ensemble reasonably reproduces the long-term climatology of extreme precipitation indices over South Korea despite some systematic errors. Both mean and extreme precipitation intensities for 80 years in the future (2021–2100) increase compared to those of thepresent. However, the increasing rates of indices related to precipitation intensities are different according to sub-period,season, and emission scenarios. Mean and extreme precipitation intensities of the future climate increase during the summer when most extreme precipitation events occur over the Korean Peninsula. Also, abnormal extreme precipitation can increase during future summers due to increasing variances of indices related to extreme precipitation intensity. Increasing extreme summer precipitation over South Korea is proportional to the increases in convective precipitation compared to non-convective precipitation. This indicates that future changes in summer precipitation, with regard to intensity and frequency, over South Korea, among representative concentration pathway scenarios, are more related to a change in convective instability rather than synoptic condition.
Keywords
Climate change; Precipitation (meteorology); Systematic errors; Extreme precipitation; HadGEM2-AO; Multi-RCM; Regional climate modeling; South Korea; STARDEX; Climate models; atmospheric convection; climate change; climate modeling; climate prediction; extreme event; Hadley cell; precipitation (climatology); regional climate; South Korea
URI
https://oasis.postech.ac.kr/handle/2014.oak/41016
DOI
10.1002/joc.5414
ISSN
0899-8418
Article Type
Article
Citation
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, vol. 38, page. E862 - E874, 2018-01
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