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91探花
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Professor Myles Allen CBE FRS

Statutory Professor

Research theme

  • Climate physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics
Myles.Allen@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72085,01865 (2)75895
Atmospheric Physics Clarendon Laboratory, room 109
  • About
  • Publications

Attribution of changes in precipitation patterns in African rainforests

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 368:1625 (2013)

Authors:

FEL Otto, RG Jones, K Halladay, MR Allen

Abstract:

Tropical rainforests in Africa are one of the most under-researched regions in theworld, but research in the Amazonian rainforest suggests potential vulnerability to climate change. Using the large ensemble of Atmosphere-only general circulation model (AGCM) simulations within the weather@home project, statistics of precipitation in the dry season of the Congo Basin rainforest are analysed. By validating the model simulation against observations, we could identify a good model performance for the June, July, August (JJA) dry season, but this result does need to be taken with caution as observed data are of poor quality. Additional validation methods have been used to investigate the applicability of probabilistic event attribution analysis from large model ensembles to a tropical region, in this case the Congo Basin. These methods corroborate the confidence in the model, leading us to believe the attribution result to be robust. That is, that there are no significant changes in the risk of low precipitation extremes during this dry season (JJA) precipitation in the Congo Basin. Results for the December, January, February dry season are less clear. The study highlights that attribution analysis has the potential to provide valuable scientific evidence of recent or anticipated climatological changes, especially in regions with sparse observational data and unclear projections of future changes. However, the strong influence of sea surface temperature teleconnection patterns on tropical precipitation provides more challenges in the set up of attribution studies than midlatitude rainfall. 漏 2013 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.

Human influence on the probability of low precipitation in the central United States in 2012

Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 94:9 (2013) S2-S6

Authors:

DE Rupp, PW Mote, N Massey, FEL Otto, MR Allen

The record winter drought of 2011-12 in the Iberian peninsula

Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 94:9 (2013) S41-S45

Authors:

RM Trigo, JA A帽el, D Barriopedro, R Garc铆a-Herrera, L Gimeno, R Nieto, R Castillo, MR Allen, N Massey

The use of a very large atmospheric model ensemble to assess potential anthropogenic influence on the UK summer 2012 high rainfall totals

Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 94:9 (2013) S36-S38

Authors:

S Sparrow, C Huntingford, N Massey, MR Allen

Energy budget constraints on climate response

Nature Geoscience 6:6 (2013) 415-416

Authors:

A Otto, FEL Otto, O Boucher, J Church, G Hegerl, PM Forster, NP Gillett, J Gregory, GC Johnson, R Knutti, N Lewis, U Lohmann, J Marotzke, G Myhre, D Shindell, B Stevens, MR Allen

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