Essential Site Maintenance: Authorea-powered sites will be updated circa 15:00-17:00 Eastern on Tuesday 5 November.
There should be no interruption to normal services, but please contact us at [email protected] in case you face any issues.

Aytaç PAÇAL

and 5 more

Extreme temperature events have traditionally been detected assuming a unimodal distribution of temperature data. We found that surface temperature data can be described more accurately with a multimodal rather than a unimodal distribution. Here, we applied Gaussian Mixture Models (GMM) to daily near-surface maximum air temperature data from the historical and future Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) simulations for 46 land regions defined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Using the multimodal distribution, we found that temperature extremes, defined based on daily data in the warmest mode of the GMM distributions, are getting more frequent in all regions. Globally, a 10-year extreme temperature event relative to 1980-2010 conditions will occur 15 times more frequently in the future under 3.0oC of Global Warming Levels (GWL). The frequency increase can be even higher in tropical regions, such that 10-year extreme temperature events will occur almost twice a week. Additionally, we analysed the change in future temperature distributions under different GWL and found that the hot temperatures are increasing faster than cold temperatures in low latitudes, while the cold temperatures are increasing faster than the hot temperatures in high latitudes. The smallest changes in temperature distribution can be found in tropical regions, where the annual temperature range is small. Our method captures the differences in geographical regions and shows that the frequency of extreme events will be even higher than reported in previous studies.

Guang Zeng

and 20 more

We quantify the impacts of halogenated ozone-depleting substances (ODSs), methane, N2O, CO2, and short-lived ozone precursors on total and partial ozone column changes between 1850 and 2014 using CMIP6 Aerosol and Chemistry Model Intercomparison Project (AerChemMIP) simulations. We find that whilst substantial ODS-induced ozone loss dominates the stratospheric ozone changes since the 1970s, the increases in short-lived ozone precursors and methane lead to increases in tropospheric ozone since the 1950s that make increasingly important contributions to total column ozone (TCO) changes. Our results show that methane impacts stratospheric ozone changes through its reaction with atomic chlorine leading to ozone increases, but this impact will decrease with declining ODSs. The N2O increases mainly impact ozone through NOx-induced ozone destruction in the stratosphere, having an overall small negative impact on TCO. CO2 increases lead to increased global stratospheric ozone due to stratospheric cooling. However, importantly CO2 increases cause TCO to decrease in the tropics. Large interannual variability obscures the responses of stratospheric ozone to N2O and CO2 changes. Substantial inter-model differences originate in the models’ representations of ODS-induced ozone depletion. We find that, although the tropospheric ozone trend is driven by the increase in its precursors, the stratospheric changes significantly impact the upper tropospheric ozone trend through modified stratospheric circulation and stratospheric ozone depletion. The speed-up of stratospheric overturning (i.e. decreasing age of air) is driven mainly by ODS and CO2; increases. Changes in methane and ozone precursors also modulate the cross-tropopause ozone flux.