Dissertação
Bloqueios atmosféricos e sistemas frontais sobre a América do Sul em cenários de clima futuro
Fecha
2014-02-20Registro en:
PEDROSO, Diego. Atmospheric blockings and frontal systems over South America in future climate scenarios. 2014. 93 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Geociências) - Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, 2014.
Autor
Pedroso, Diego
Institución
Resumen
The meteorological systems modulate the behavior of rainfall and temperature on
large regions and must be correctly simulated by the climate models. The representation of
these events should be good for the reliability model to be higher. This research therefore
has the primary aim of examining how atmospheric blocks and frontal systems are being
detected. Was used for this, the model of the British Center, HadGEM2-ES (Hadley Centre
Global Environment Model version 2 Earth System) in two climate change scenarios,
RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 in the future (2020-2049) projections series, comparing them with series
of reference for the past 30 years (1975-2004). The results will be validated from those
already found by other studies. For the blocks, the detection method proposed by Pelly e
Hoskins (2003), in which find meridionaly anomalous variations of potential temperature
in the dynamical tropopause. Frontal systems were found by frontogenetic function first
proposed by Petterssen (1956). Moreover, the study of changes in rainfall, simulated by
RegCM4 (Regional Climate Model version 4) model for the South and Southeast regions
of Brazil is made. The main results show that there good agreement between the annual
cycle and positioning of both systems by the model on past. There is a reduction of blocking
systems on Central Pacific (170.0◦W-120◦W) and increased over the same region of
the Southeast Pacific (117.5◦W-80◦W) and the Southwest Atlantic (77.5◦W-40◦W) in both
future scenarios. The frontal systems, which also show a good agreement in the reference
series, have a tendency to increase the frequency in the two studied regions. Likewise the
accumulated rainfall simulated on RegCM4 indicating to be more significant in summer, fall
and spring seasons and behavior similar to that reported previously for the winter months.