Abstract

The diurnal cycle of precipitation (DCP) is a core mode of precipitation variability in regions and seasons where the dominant precipitation type is convective. The occurrence of extreme precipitation is often closely linked to the DCP. Future changes in extreme precipitation may furthermore, in certain regions, exhibit a strong diurnal signal. Here we investigate the present and future diurnal cycle of hourly precipitation in the state-of-the-art 0.11°C EURO-CORDEX (EC-11) ensemble and in a convection-permitting model (CPM), with a focus on extremes. For the present climate, long-standing timing and frequency biases in the DCP found in lower-resolution models persist in the EC-11 ensemble. In the CPM, however, these biases are largely absent, particularly the diurnal distribution of extremes, which the EC-11 ensemble misrepresents. For future changes to hourly precipitation, we find clear diurnal signals in the CPM and in EC-11 models, with high regional and intra-ensemble variability. The diurnal signal typically peaks in the morning. Interestingly, the EC-11 ensemble mean shows reasonable agreement with the CPM on the diurnal signal’s timing, showing that this feature is representable by models with parametrized convection. Comparison with the CPM suggests that EC-11 models greatly underestimate the amplitude of this diurnal signal. Our study highlights the advantages of CPMs for investigating future precipitation change at the diurnal scale, while also showing the EC-11 ensemble capable of detecting a diurnal signal in future precipitation change.

Highlights

  • Precipitation is one of numerous meteorological variables which exhibit diurnal cycles, all stemming directly or indirectly from accumulated surface heating via the diurnal cycle of solar insolation

  • We evaluate whether biases in the modelled all-hour diurnal cycle of precipitation (DCP), including timing biases, differ from the diurnal biases found for precipitation frequency and higher precipitation intensities in (i) EC-11 regional climate models (RCMs) forced with free-running general circulation models (GCMs), (ii) EC-11 RCMs forced with reanalysis and (iii) the CCLM-025 convection-permitting model (CPM) nested in the reanalysis-forced CCLM-11

  • We have demonstrated the superior representation of the DCP in a CPM compared to the EC-11 ensemble, with respect to the diurnal distribution of intense to extreme precipitation

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Summary

21 May 2021

The diurnal cycle of precipitation (DCP) is a core mode of precipitation variability in regions and. Future changes in extreme precipitation may in author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation certain regions, exhibit a strong diurnal signal. Of hourly precipitation in the state-of-the-art 0.11°C EURO-CORDEX (EC-11) ensemble and in a convection-permitting model (CPM), with a focus on extremes. In the CPM, these biases are largely absent, the diurnal distribution of extremes, which the EC-11 ensemble misrepresents. For future changes to hourly precipitation, we find clear diurnal signals in the CPM and in EC-11 models, with high regional and intra-ensemble variability. The EC-11 ensemble mean shows reasonable agreement with the CPM on the diurnal signal’s timing, showing that this feature is representable by models with parametrized convection.

Introduction
Data and methods
10 MPI-ESM-LR-RCA4
Results and discussion
Further discussion and conclusions
Data availability statement
Full Text
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