Journal article

Estimation of the maximum annual number of North Atlantic tropical cyclones using climate models

SL Lavender, KJE Walsh, LP Caron, M King, S Monkiewicz, M Guishard, Q Zhang, B Hunt

Science Advances | AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE | Published : 2018

Abstract

Using millennia-long climate model simulations, favorable environments for tropical cyclone formation are examined to determine whether the record number of tropical cyclones in the 2005 Atlantic season is close to the maximum possible number for the present climate of that basin. By estimating both the mean number of tropical cyclones and their possible year-to-year random variability, we find that the likelihood that the maximum number of storms in the Atlantic could be greater than the number of events observed during the 2005 season is less than 3.5%. Using a less restrictive comparison between simulated and observed climate with the internal variability accounted for, this probability i..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Korea Institute of Ocean Science and Technology


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was funded by the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences' Risk Prediction Initiative (RPI). L.-P.C.'s contract is cofinanced by the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) under Juan de la Cierva Incorporacion postdoctoral fellowship number IJCI-2015-23367. This research was partially supported through funding from the Earth System and Climate Change Hub of the Australia's National Environmental Science Programme. L.-P.C. acknowledges financial support from MINECO (project CGL2015-70353-R).