z-logo
Premium
Constraining and Characterizing the Size of Atmospheric Rivers: A Perspective Independent From the Detection Algorithm
Author(s) -
IndaDíaz H. A.,
O'Brien T. A.,
Zhou Y.,
Collins W. D.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1029/2020jd033746
Subject(s) - landfall , range (aeronautics) , estimation , precipitation , environmental science , water vapor , algorithm , magnitude (astronomy) , perspective (graphical) , meteorology , computer science , geography , tropical cyclone , physics , materials science , engineering , systems engineering , astronomy , composite material , artificial intelligence
Atmospheric rivers (AR) are large and narrow filaments of poleward horizontal water vapor transport. Because of its direct relationship with horizontal vapor transport, extreme precipitation, and overall AR impacts over land, the AR size is an important characteristic that needs to be better understood. Current AR detection and tracking algorithms have resulted in large uncertainty in estimating AR sizes, with areas varying over several orders of magnitude among different detection methods. We develop and implement five independent size estimation methods to characterize the size of ARs that make landfall over the west coast of North America in the 1980–2017 period and reduce the range of size estimation from ARTMIP. ARs that originate in the Northwest Pacific (WP) (100°−180°E) have larger sizes and are more zonally oriented than those from the Northeast Pacific (EP) (180°−240°E). ARs become smaller through their life cycle, mainly due to reductions in their width. They also become more meridionally oriented toward the end of their life cycle. Overall, the size estimation methods proposed in this study provide a range of AR areas (between 7 × 10 11 and 10 13  m 2 ), that is, several orders of magnitude narrower than current methods estimation. This methodology can provide statistical constraints in size and geometry for the AR detection and tracking algorithms, and an objective insight for future studies about AR size changes under different climate scenarios.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here