Authors
Jonathan J Rutz, W James Steenburgh
Publication date
2012/10
Journal
Atmospheric Science Letters
Volume
13
Issue
4
Pages
257-261
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Description
Atmospheric rivers (ARs) have increasingly been recognized for their contribution to high‐impact weather and climate variability. A recent investigation based on observations located primarily in lowland valleys and basins of the western United States suggests that 10–50% of the total cool season (November to April) precipitation between water years 1998 and 2008 occurred on the day of and day following AR landfall (hereafter the AR fraction), as identified using Special Sensor Microwave Imager data. However, these results are based only on ARs crossing the North American west coast between 32.5°N and 52.5°N, which excludes those crossing the west coast of the Baja Peninsula. Here, we identify ARs in the ERA‐Interim reanalysis and examine the AR fraction at high‐elevation observational sites and in the NOAA/CPC Unified Daily Precipitation Analysis. At high‐elevation snowpack telemetry sites, we find …
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