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Effect of Baseline Period on Quantification of Climate Extremes over the United States Extreme weather events, including heatwaves, heavy precipitation, and drought, have a large impact on society through human health, destruction of infrastructure, ecological change, and economic losses. Reanalyses such as NASA’s Modern Era Retrospective Analysis, version 2 (MERRA-2) are a valuable tool for analyzing past extreme events to determine their underlying causes and how extremes have changed over the past four decades. The detection of extreme events relies on a threshold for precipitation or temperature that is derived using a reference period, which can then be used to determine how extreme an event was or what the return period is. Operational centers typically use a 30-year climatology period that shifts in time every ten years, while the World Meteorological Organization suggests that the maximum amount of data should be included for the detection of extreme events due to their rare occurrence. As global and regional climate continues to change, the interpretation of extreme events is reliant on the baseline period that is used for the underlying thresholds and can be a source of uncertainty for the policy making community. Three baseline periods – 1981-2010, 1991-2020, and 1981-2020 – will be used to compute percentiles of temperature and precipitation across the contiguous United States and will then by employed to determine monthly indices representing heatwaves, cold spells, and extreme precipitation events. A spatial and temporal analysis of the resulting extreme weather indices will demonstrate the appropriateness for each baseline period for the evaluation of extreme events.
Document ID
20220017884
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Poster
Authors
Natalie Thomas
(University of Maryland, Baltimore County Baltimore, Maryland, United States)
Allison Collow
(University of Maryland, Baltimore County Columbia, Maryland, United States)
Michael Bosilovich
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
Amin Dezfuli
(Science Systems and Applications (United States) Lanham, Maryland, United States)
Date Acquired
November 28, 2022
Subject Category
Meteorology and Climatology
Meeting Information
Meeting: AGU Fall Meeting 2022
Location: Chicago, IL
Country: US
Start Date: December 12, 2022
Sponsors: American Geophysical Union
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC22M0001
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNG17HP01C
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
Extremes
United States
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