Title: Reconstructing Global Precipitation for the 20th Century
1Reconstructing Global Precipitation for the 20th
Century
- Presented by
- Thomas M. Smith
2Requirement, Science, and Benefit
- Requirement/Objective
- Climate
- Little or no oceanic precipitation sampling in
pre-satellite era (before 1979) - Need analyses to estimate oceanic climate scale
variations - Evaluate land ocean multi-decadal precipitation
changes beginning 1900 - Science
- How much has oceanic precipitation changed over
the 20th century? - How well can climate-model precipitation be
validated? - Benefit
- Addresses NOAAs research plans to understand and
predict changes in the global hydrologic cycle,
included in water and weather and climate
research - Analysis of ocean precipitation can be used to
validate and improve climate models, needed for
IPCC and other international national
assessments - Improved assessments and improved climate models
are needed for studies of changing fresh-water
availability, needed for planning for future
societal needs
3Challenges and Path Forward
- Science challenges
- Improving precipitation analyses from satellites
and reconstructions - Satellite-based analysis improvements to continue
at STAR/CICS, with partners including U.
MD/ESSIC, NCDC, and NASA/GSFC - Improving climate model representation of
precipitation variations - Will work with other national and international
groups to help validate climate models - Next steps
- Documentation and making reconstruction available
- Investigating ways to improve the reconstruction
- Transition Path
- Making reconstruction available to users
- Plans to update the reconstruction for climate
possible studies and monitoring
4Basics of the Reconstruction Problem
- In Situ Sampling
- Land sampling for 20th century from analyses
Climate Research Unit of Univ. of East Anglia
(CRU), Global Precipitation Climatology Center
(GPCC), Global Historical Climate Network (GHCN) - Time series of of average annual global area
sampled by each analysis - Sparse oceanic sampling over most of 20th
century need to use satellite in situ data
together to understand ocean-area changes since
1900
5Reconstruction Methods
- Two Reconstructions
- Both require high-quality satellite analyses to
generate statistics needed for historical
analyses - STAR contributes to the development and
improvement of satellite-based analyses needed - 1. Monthly, fitting gauge data to spatial
covariance functions, resolves land and oceanic
interannual variations - 2. Annual, Canonical Correlation Analysis (CCA)
precipitation from sea-surface temperature
sea-level pressure, resolves oceanic
multi-decadal variations - Comparison analyses Global Precipitation
Climatology Project (GPCP), Global Historical
Climate Network (CHCN), IPCC Assessment report 4
ensemble of coupled models (AR4)
Smith, T. M., M. R. P. Sapiano, and P. A. Arkin,
2008 Historical Reconstruction of Monthly
Oceanic Precipitation (1900-2006), J. Geophys.
Res., 113, D17115, doi10.1029/2008JD009851. Smi
th, T. M., P. A. Arkin, and M. R. P. Sapiano,
2009 Reconstruction of near-global annual
precipitation using correlations with sea surface
temperature and sea level pressure. J. Geophys.
Res., 114, D12107, doi10.1029/2008JD011580.
Near global averages of CCA annual land
gauge-sampled (upper) and ocean low-frequency
(lower).
6Merged Reconstruction
- Merged analyses
- Fitting gauge data to spatial modes and the CCA
(from the previous slide) are merged - A global monthly analysis is the results
- Comparisons to AR4 model ensemble
- Joint Empirical Analysis Function analysis of
low-pass normalized data from each - Shows were the model ensemble climate change
signal is consistent with the analysis, and where
it has systematic biases
Smith, T. M., M. R. P. Sapiano, and P. A. Arkin,
2009 Modes of multi-decadal oceanic
precipitation variations from a reconstruction
and AR4 model output for the 20th century,
Geophys. Res. Lett., 36, L14708,
doi10.1029/2009GL039234. T.M. Smith, P.A.
Arkin, M.R.P. Sapiano, C.-Y. Chang, 2010 Merged
statistical analyses of historical monthly
precipitation anomalies beginning 1900.
Submitted to J. Climate. P.A. Arkin, T. M.
Smith, M.R.P. Sapiano, J. Janowiak, 2010
Challenges in Observing Changes in Global
Precipitation. To be submitted to Environmental
Research Letters.
7Challenges and Path Forward
- Science challenges
- Improving precipitation analyses from satellites
and reconstructions - Satellite-based analysis improvements to continue
at STAR/CICS, with partners including U.
MD/ESSIC, NCDC, and NASA/GSFC - Improving climate model representation of
precipitation variations - Will work with other national and international
groups to help validate climate models - Next steps
- Documentation and making reconstruction available
- Investigating ways to improve the reconstruction
- Transition Path
- Making reconstruction available to users
- Plans to update the reconstruction for climate
possible studies and monitoring