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Assessing Changes in Characteristics of Hot Extremes Over India in a Warming Environment and their Driving Mechanisms
by
Rai, Archana
, Kucharski, Fred
, Joshi, Manish K.
, Kulkarni, Ashwini
in
20th century
/ 704/106
/ 704/106/35
/ 704/106/694
/ 704/172
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Climate change
/ Delayed response
/ Economic impact
/ El Nino
/ Global warming
/ High temperature
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ multidisciplinary
/ Probability distribution
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sea surface temperature
/ Soil moisture
/ Southern Oscillation
2020
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Assessing Changes in Characteristics of Hot Extremes Over India in a Warming Environment and their Driving Mechanisms
by
Rai, Archana
, Kucharski, Fred
, Joshi, Manish K.
, Kulkarni, Ashwini
in
20th century
/ 704/106
/ 704/106/35
/ 704/106/694
/ 704/172
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Climate change
/ Delayed response
/ Economic impact
/ El Nino
/ Global warming
/ High temperature
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ multidisciplinary
/ Probability distribution
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sea surface temperature
/ Soil moisture
/ Southern Oscillation
2020
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Assessing Changes in Characteristics of Hot Extremes Over India in a Warming Environment and their Driving Mechanisms
by
Rai, Archana
, Kucharski, Fred
, Joshi, Manish K.
, Kulkarni, Ashwini
in
20th century
/ 704/106
/ 704/106/35
/ 704/106/694
/ 704/172
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Climate change
/ Delayed response
/ Economic impact
/ El Nino
/ Global warming
/ High temperature
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ multidisciplinary
/ Probability distribution
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Sea surface temperature
/ Soil moisture
/ Southern Oscillation
2020
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Assessing Changes in Characteristics of Hot Extremes Over India in a Warming Environment and their Driving Mechanisms
Journal Article
Assessing Changes in Characteristics of Hot Extremes Over India in a Warming Environment and their Driving Mechanisms
2020
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Overview
Change in hot extremes is one of the accepted evidence and also a global indicator of an anthropogenic climate change, which has serious environmental and economic impacts. In the present study, the India Meteorological Department gridded temperature data is used to characterize hot extremes over India in terms of frequency and intensity. Results provide compelling evidence that large parts of India, except the Indo-Gangetic plains, have experienced more occurrences of hot days (upsurge by 24.7%) having higher temperatures in the recent period (1976–2018), compared to the past (1951–1975), which suggests a shift in climate. Strong positive geopotential height anomalies at 500 hPa over the northern parts of India, which dynamically produces subsidence and clear sky conditions along with reduced precipitable water and depleted soil moisture are identified to be the crucial factors responsible for an increase of hot extremes in recent decades. Furthermore, the preceding December-February Niño-3.4 sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies are strongly connected with hot days frequency and the mechanism for the lag of several months is related to 3–4 months delayed response of Indian Ocean SSTs to El Niño/Southern Oscillation. Thus, post-Niño hot extremes over India can be potentially anticipated in advance and this will help society to prepare for such extremes.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group
Subject
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