Global expansion of tropical cyclone precipitation footprint
Precipitation from tropical cyclones (TCs) can cause massive damage from inland floods and is becoming more intense under a warming climate. However, knowledge gaps still exist in changes of spatial patterns in heavy TC precipitation. Here we define a metric, DIST30, as the mean radial distance from...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2024-06, Vol.15 (1), p.4824-10, Article 4824 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Precipitation from tropical cyclones (TCs) can cause massive damage from inland floods and is becoming more intense under a warming climate. However, knowledge gaps still exist in changes of spatial patterns in heavy TC precipitation. Here we define a metric, DIST30, as the mean radial distance from centers of clustered heavy rainfall cells (> 30 mm/3 h) to TC center, representing the footprint of heavy TC precipitation. There is significant global increase in DIST30 at a rate of 0.34 km/year. Increases of DIST30 cover 59.87% of total TC impact areas, with growth especially strong in the Western North Pacific, Northern Atlantic, and Southern Pacific. The XGBoost machine learning model showed that monthly DIST30 variability is majorly controlled by TC maximum wind speed, location, sea surface temperature, vertical wind shear, and total water column vapor. TC poleward migration in the Northern Hemisphere contributes substantially to the DIST30 upward trend globally.
The tropical cyclone (TC) precipitation footprint has expanded globally. Interpretable machine learning reveals that this footprint is majorly controlled by TC wind speed, location, sea surface temperature, wind shear, and total water column vapor. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-024-49115-1 |