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    Article

    Differences in representation of extreme precipitation events in two high resolution models

    High resolution regional climate models are needed to understand how climate change will impact extreme precipitation. Current state-of-the-art climate models are Convection Permitting Models (CPMs) at kilomet...

    Emma D. Thomassen, Elizabeth J. Kendon, Hjalte J. D. Sørup in Climate Dynamics (2021)

  2. Article

    Open Access

    The first multi-model ensemble of regional climate simulations at kilometer-scale resolution, part I: evaluation of precipitation

    Here we present the first multi-model ensemble of regional climate simulations at kilometer-scale horizontal grid spacing over a decade long period. A total of 23 simulations run with a horizontal grid spacing...

    Nikolina Ban, Cécile Caillaud, Erika Coppola, Emanuela Pichelli in Climate Dynamics (2021)

  3. Article

    Open Access

    Europe-wide precipitation projections at convection permitting scale with the Unified Model

    For the first time, we analyze 2.2 km UK Met Office Unified Model convection-permitting model (CPM) projections for a pan-European domain. These new simulations represent a major increase in domain size, allow...

    Steven C. Chan, Elizabeth J. Kendon, Ségolène Berthou, Giorgia Fosser in Climate Dynamics (2020)

  4. No Access

    Article

    Pan-European climate at convection-permitting scale: a model intercomparison study

    We investigate the effect of using convection-permitting models (CPMs) spanning a pan-European domain on the representation of precipitation distribution at a climatic scale. In particular we compare two 2.2 k...

    Ségolène Berthou, Elizabeth J. Kendon, Steven C. Chan, Nikolina Ban in Climate Dynamics (2020)

  5. Article

    Open Access

    Projected changes in extreme precipitation over Scotland and Northern England using a high-resolution regional climate model

    The UK Met Office has previously conducted convection-permitting climate simulations over the southern UK (Kendon et al. in Nat Clim Change 4:570–576, 2014). The southern UK simulations have been followed up by a...

    Steven C. Chan, Ron Kahana, Elizabeth J. Kendon, Hayley J. Fowler in Climate Dynamics (2018)

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    Article

    Downturn in scaling of UK extreme rainfall with temperature for future hottest days

    Extreme daily precipitation is thought to increase with warming at a rate of 6.5% per K. High-resolution simulations for the southern UK show this scaling for present conditions, but above 22 °C this scaling f...

    Steven C. Chan, Elizabeth J. Kendon, Nigel M. Roberts in Nature Geoscience (2016)

  7. No Access

    Article

    Does increasing the spatial resolution of a regional climate model improve the simulated daily precipitation?

    Three different resolution (50, 12, and 1.5 km) regional climate model simulations are compared in terms of their ability to simulate moderate and high daily precipitation events over the southern United Kingd...

    Steven C. Chan, Elizabeth J. Kendon, Hayley J. Fowler in Climate Dynamics (2013)

  8. No Access

    Article

    High-resolution subtropical summer precipitation derived from dynamical downscaling of the NCEP/DOE reanalysis: how much small-scale information is added by a regional model?

    This study assesses the regional-scale summer precipitation produced by the dynamical downscaling of analyzed large-scale fields. The main goal of this study is to investigate how much the regional model adds ...

    Young-Kwon Lim, Lydia B. Stefanova, Steven C. Chan in Climate Dynamics (2011)