Authors
Jason A Otkin, Mark Svoboda, Eric D Hunt, Trent W Ford, Martha C Anderson, Christopher Hain, Jeffrey B Basara
Publication date
2018/5/1
Source
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
Volume
99
Issue
5
Pages
911-919
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Description
Given the increasing use of the term “flash drought” by the media and scientific community, it is prudent to develop a consistent definition that can be used to identify these events and to understand their salient characteristics. It is generally accepted that flash droughts occur more often during the summer owing to increased evaporative demand; however, two distinct approaches have been used to identify them. The first approach focuses on their rate of intensification, whereas the second approach implicitly focuses on their duration. These conflicting notions for what constitutes a flash drought (ie, unusually fast intensification vs short duration) introduce ambiguity that affects our ability to detect their onset, monitor their development, and understand the mechanisms that control their evolution. Here, we propose that the definition for “flash drought” should explicitly focus on its rate of intensification rather than its …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JA Otkin, M Svoboda, ED Hunt, TW Ford, MC Anderson… - Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 2018