A Global Assessment of Heatwaves Since 1850 in Different Observational and Model Data Sets

Abstract We show that ModE‐Sim, a global ensemble of atmospheric model simulations that uses observed ocean boundary conditions and radiative forcings providing 36 members with daily climate information can be used to in‐depth analyze the known spatial and temporal variability of heatwaves in the No...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical Research Letters
Main Authors: Laura Lipfert, Ralf Hand, Stefan Brönnimann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-02-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL106212
_version_ 1850289454259896320
author Laura Lipfert
Ralf Hand
Stefan Brönnimann
author_facet Laura Lipfert
Ralf Hand
Stefan Brönnimann
author_sort Laura Lipfert
collection DOAJ
container_title Geophysical Research Letters
description Abstract We show that ModE‐Sim, a global ensemble of atmospheric model simulations that uses observed ocean boundary conditions and radiative forcings providing 36 members with daily climate information can be used to in‐depth analyze the known spatial and temporal variability of heatwaves in the Northern Hemisphere and Australia during the past 160 years. It can also be used to study actual past extreme events like heatwaves during the El Nino 1877/1878. To analyze past heatwaves we use a novel approach of a transient baseline climatology and compare to different observational data sets. Furthermore, we analyze sea surface temperature anomalies during the most extreme heatwave summers in North America, Europe and Australia and identify the most prominent anomaly patterns over the Subpolar North Atlantic and in the Central Pacific. Using a large ensemble of forced simulations, like ModE‐Sim can consequently contribute to a better understanding of preindustrial heatwaves, their decadal variability and their driving mechanisms.
format Article
id doaj-art-bca74dd724cb4ea180413d87e7e7fffd
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 0094-8276
1944-8007
language English
publishDate 2024-02-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-bca74dd724cb4ea180413d87e7e7fffd2025-08-19T23:36:05ZengWileyGeophysical Research Letters0094-82761944-80072024-02-01513n/an/a10.1029/2023GL106212A Global Assessment of Heatwaves Since 1850 in Different Observational and Model Data SetsLaura Lipfert0Ralf Hand1Stefan Brönnimann2Institute of Geography and Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research University of Bern Bern SwitzerlandInstitute of Geography and Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research University of Bern Bern SwitzerlandInstitute of Geography and Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research University of Bern Bern SwitzerlandAbstract We show that ModE‐Sim, a global ensemble of atmospheric model simulations that uses observed ocean boundary conditions and radiative forcings providing 36 members with daily climate information can be used to in‐depth analyze the known spatial and temporal variability of heatwaves in the Northern Hemisphere and Australia during the past 160 years. It can also be used to study actual past extreme events like heatwaves during the El Nino 1877/1878. To analyze past heatwaves we use a novel approach of a transient baseline climatology and compare to different observational data sets. Furthermore, we analyze sea surface temperature anomalies during the most extreme heatwave summers in North America, Europe and Australia and identify the most prominent anomaly patterns over the Subpolar North Atlantic and in the Central Pacific. Using a large ensemble of forced simulations, like ModE‐Sim can consequently contribute to a better understanding of preindustrial heatwaves, their decadal variability and their driving mechanisms.https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL106212heatwaveshistorical climatologyextreme eventsclimate modelinglarge ensembles
spellingShingle Laura Lipfert
Ralf Hand
Stefan Brönnimann
A Global Assessment of Heatwaves Since 1850 in Different Observational and Model Data Sets
heatwaves
historical climatology
extreme events
climate modeling
large ensembles
title A Global Assessment of Heatwaves Since 1850 in Different Observational and Model Data Sets
title_full A Global Assessment of Heatwaves Since 1850 in Different Observational and Model Data Sets
title_fullStr A Global Assessment of Heatwaves Since 1850 in Different Observational and Model Data Sets
title_full_unstemmed A Global Assessment of Heatwaves Since 1850 in Different Observational and Model Data Sets
title_short A Global Assessment of Heatwaves Since 1850 in Different Observational and Model Data Sets
title_sort global assessment of heatwaves since 1850 in different observational and model data sets
topic heatwaves
historical climatology
extreme events
climate modeling
large ensembles
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL106212
work_keys_str_mv AT lauralipfert aglobalassessmentofheatwavessince1850indifferentobservationalandmodeldatasets
AT ralfhand aglobalassessmentofheatwavessince1850indifferentobservationalandmodeldatasets
AT stefanbronnimann aglobalassessmentofheatwavessince1850indifferentobservationalandmodeldatasets
AT lauralipfert globalassessmentofheatwavessince1850indifferentobservationalandmodeldatasets
AT ralfhand globalassessmentofheatwavessince1850indifferentobservationalandmodeldatasets
AT stefanbronnimann globalassessmentofheatwavessince1850indifferentobservationalandmodeldatasets