3 research outputs found

    Development and implementation of river-routing process module in a regional climate model and its evaluation in Korean river basins

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    This study assessed the potential for river discharge simulation by implementing an onlineriver-routing scheme into the regional climate model (RCM) framework as a unified subroutine moduleand investigated the sensitivity of simulated river flows in response to changes in spatial resolutions in RCMand river-routing scheme. The river-routing scheme gathers runoff from the RCMand advects them horizontallyalong the river drainage network. The dynamical downscaling simulations were driven by reanalysis at theboundaries for the period of 2000–2010, using different grid sizes for RCM (50 and 12.5 km) and for river-routingscheme (0.5°, 0.25°, and 0.125°). Simulated river discharge was evaluated throughout the three largest riverbasins in Korea. The simulation results showed potential for river discharge modeling in the RCM framework.The model generally captured the seasonal and monthly variabilities, and the daily scale peaks. From theresolution sensitivity experiments, it was confirmed that high-resolution RCM enhances the reproducibility ofriver discharge; however, the lack of sophistication of the current river-routing scheme, which was originallydeveloped for continental and macroscale application, mitigates taking advantage of enhanced resolution inriver model. On the basis of our findings and experiences in this study, we revealed several considerable issuesfor future developments of river simulation in the RCM framework

    Changes of precipitation extremes over South Korea projected by the 5 RCMs under RCP scenarios

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    The change of extreme precipitation is assessed with the HadGEM2-AO - 5 Regional Climate Models (RCMs) chain, which is a national downscaling project undertaken cooperatively by several South Korean institutes aimed at producing regional climate change projection with fine resolution (12.5 km) around the Korean Peninsula. The downscaling domain, resolution and lateral boundary conditions are held the same among the 5 RCMs to minimize the uncertainties from model configuration. Climatological changes reveal a statistically significant increase in the mid-21st century (2046- 2070; Fut1) and the late-21st century (2076-2100; Fut2) precipitation properties related to extreme precipitation, such as precipitation intensity and average of upper 5 percentile daily precipitation, with respect to the reference period (1981-2005). Changes depending on the intensity categories also present a clear trend of decreasing light rain and increasing heavy rain. In accordance with these results, the change of 1-in-50 year maximum precipitation intensity over South Korea is estimated by the GEV method. The result suggests that the 50-year return value (RV50) will change from -32.69% to 72.7% and from -31.6% to 96.32% in Fut1 and from -31.97% to 86.25% and from -19.45% to 134.88% in Fut2 under representative concentration pathway (RCP) 4.5 and 8.5 scenarios, respectively, at the 90% confidence level. This study suggests that multi-RCMs can be used to reduce uncertainties and assess the future change of extreme precipitation more reliably. Moreover, future projection of the regional climate change contains uncertainties evoked from not only driving GCM but also RCM. Therefore, multi-GCM and multi-RCM studies are expected to provide more robust projection.clos

    Future changes in drought characteristics over South Korea using multi regional climate models with the standardized precipitation index

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    In this study, the projection of future drought conditions is estimated over South Korea based on the latest and most advanced sets of regional climate model simulations under the Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP4.5 and RCP8.5) scenarios, within the context of the national downscaling project of the Republic of Korea. The five Regional Climate Models (RCMs) are used to produce climate-change simulations around the Korean Peninsula and to estimate the uncertainty associated with these simulations. The horizontal resolution of each RCM is 12.5 km and model simulations are available for historical (1981-2010) and future (2021-2100) periods under forcing from the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 scenarios. To assess the characteristics of drought on multiple time scales in the future, we use Standardized Precipitation Indices for 1-month (SPI- 1), 6-month (SPI-6) and 12-month (SPI-12). The number of drought months in the future is shown to be characterized by strong variability, with both increasing and decreasing trends among the scenarios. In particular, the number of drought months over South Korea is projected to increase (decrease) for the period 2041-2070 in the RCP8.5 (RCP4.5) scenario and increase (decrease) for the period 2071-2100 in the RCP4.5 (RCP8.5) scenario. In addition, the percentage area under any drought condition is overall projected to gradually decrease over South Korea during the entire future period, with the exception of SPI-1 in the RCP4.5 scenario. Particularly, the drought areas for SPI-1 in the RCP4.5 scenario show weakly positive long-term trend. Otherwise, future changes in drought areas for SPI- 6 and SPI-12 have a marked downward trend under the two RCP scenarios.1131Nsciescopuskc
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