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Heatwave future changes from an ensemble of km-scale regional climate simulations within CORDEX-FPS convection
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  • Lorenzo Sangelantoni,
  • Stefan Pieter Sobolowski,
  • Pedro M. M. Soares,
  • Klaus Goergen,
  • Rita M. Cardoso,
  • Marianna Adinolfi,
  • Andreas Dobler,
  • Eleni Katragkou,
  • Enrico Scoccimarro,
  • Rossella Ferretti,
  • Merja Tölle,
  • Hendrik Feldmann
Lorenzo Sangelantoni
Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change (CMCC)

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Stefan Pieter Sobolowski
NORCE Norwegian Research Centre
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Pedro M. M. Soares
Instituto Dom Luiz, CGUL, University of Lisbon
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Klaus Goergen
Research Centre Jülich
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Rita M. Cardoso
Instituto Dom Luiz, Faculdade de Ciências, University of Lisbon
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Marianna Adinolfi
CMCC Foundation
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Andreas Dobler
Norwegian Meteorological Institute
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Eleni Katragkou
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
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Enrico Scoccimarro
Fondazione Centro euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici - CMCC
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Rossella Ferretti
University of L'Aquila
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Merja Tölle
Departement of Bioclimatology, U of Göttingen
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Hendrik Feldmann
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
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Abstract

As global temperatures continue to rise, the impact of heatwaves (HWs) becomes increasingly striking. The increasing frequency and intensity of these events underscore the critical need to understand regional-scale mechanisms and feedback, exacerbating or mitigating HW magnitude.
Here, we use an ensemble of convection-permitting regional climate models (CPRCMs) to elucidate future HW changes at these fine spatial scales. We explore whether the recently highlighted drier/warmer signal introduced by CPRCMs improves summer temperature extremes representation and if it modulates future HW changes compared to convection-parameterizing regional climate models (RCMs).
In historical runs, CPRCMs show a more realistic representation of summer maximum temperature according to a ground-station-based evaluation.
CPRCMs project substantially drier conditions than RCMs. This is associated with a modulation of HW temperature changes which show diversified spatial patterns, magnitudes, and signs.
CPRCMs ensemble shows an overall reduction in HW metrics future changes inter-model spread compared to the RCMs ensemble.
10 Jul 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive
11 Jul 2024Published in ESS Open Archive