PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

The world’s atmospheric rivers now have an intensity ranking like hurricanes

The metric to measure these storms is ready for prime-time use around the world

The world’s atmospheric rivers now have an intensity ranking like hurricanes
2023-03-09
(Press-News.org) American Geophysical Union
9 March 2023
AGU Release No. 23-10
For Immediate Release 

This press release and accompanying multimedia are available online at: https://news.agu.org/press-release/the-worlds-atmospheric-rivers-now-have-an-intensity-ranking-like-hurricanes/

AGU press contact:
Rebecca Dzombak, +1 (202) 777-7492, news@agu.org (UTC-5 hours)

Contact information for the researchers:
Bin Guan, University of California Los Angeles and California Institute of Technology, bin.guan@jpl.nasa.gov (UTC-8 hours)

WASHINGTON — Atmospheric rivers, which are long, narrow bands of water vapor, are becoming more intense and frequent with climate change. A new study demonstrates that a recently developed scale for atmospheric river intensity (akin to the hurricane scale) can be used to rank atmospheric rivers and identify hotspots of the most intense atmospheric rivers not only along the U.S. West Coast but also worldwide.

Atmospheric rivers typically form when warm temperatures create moist packets of air, which strong winds then transport across the ocean; some make landfall. The intensity scale ranks these atmospheric rivers from AR-1 to AR-5 (with AR-5 being the most intense) based on how long they last and how much moisture they transport.

In part because some West Coast weather outlets are using the intensity scale, “atmospheric river” is no longer an obscure meteorological term but brings sharply to mind unending rain and dangerous flooding, the authors said. The string of atmospheric rivers that hit California in December and January, for instance, at times reached AR-4. Earlier in 2022, the atmospheric river that contributed to disastrous flooding in Pakistan was an AR-5, the most damaging, most intense atmospheric river rating.

The scale helps communities know whether an atmospheric river will bring benefit or cause chaos: The storms can deliver much-needed rain or snow, but if they’re too intense, they can cause flooding, landslides and power outages, as California and Pakistan experienced. The most severe atmospheric rivers can cause hundreds of millions of dollars of damage in days in the western U.S.; damage in other regions has yet to be comprehensively assessed.

“Atmospheric rivers are the hurricanes of the West Coast when it comes to the public’s situational awareness,” said F. Martin Ralph, an atmospheric scientist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography and a coauthor on the new study. People need to know when they’re coming, have a sense for how extreme the storm will be, and know how to prepare, he said. “This scale is designed to help answer all those questions.”

Ralph and his colleagues originally developed the scale for the U.S. West Coast. The new study demonstrates that atmospheric river events can be directly compared globally using the intensity scale, which is how the researchers identified where the most intense events (AR-5) form and fizzle out, and how many of those make landfall.

The researchers used climate data and their previously developed algorithm for identifying and tracking atmospheric rivers to build a database of intensity-ranked atmospheric river events around the globe over 40 years (1979/1980 to 2019/2020). The study was published in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, which publishes research that advances understanding of Earth’s atmosphere and its interaction with other components of the Earth system.

“This study is a first step toward making the atmospheric river scale a globally useful tool for meteorologists and city planners,” said Bin Guan, an atmospheric scientist at the Joint Institute for Regional Earth System Science and Engineering, a collaboration between University of California-Los Angeles and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, who led the study. “By mapping out the footprints of each atmospheric river rank globally, we can start to better understand the societal impacts of these events in many different regions.”

The authors also found that more intense atmospheric rivers (AR-4 and AR-5) are less common than weaker events, with AR-5 events occurring only once every two to three years when globally averaged. The most intense atmospheric rivers are also less likely to make landfall, and when they do, they are unlikely to maintain their strength for long and penetrate farther inland. “They tend to dissipate soon after landfall, leaving their impacts most felt in coastal areas,” said Guan.

The study found four “centers,” or hotspots, of where AR-5s tend to die, in the extratropical North Pacific and Atlantic, Southeast Pacific, and Southeast Atlantic. Cities on the coasts within these hotspots, such as San Francisco and Lisbon, are most likely to see intense AR-5s make landfall. Midlatitudes in general are the most likely regions to have atmospheric rivers of any rank.

Strong El Niño years are more likely to have more atmospheric rivers, and stronger ones at that, which is noteworthy because NOAA recently forecasted that an El Niño condition is likely to develop by the end of the summer this year.

While local meteorologists, news outlets and other West Coasters may have incorporated “atmospheric river” and the intensity scale into their lives, adoption has been slower elsewhere, Ralph said. He hopes to see, within five years or so, meteorologists on TV around the world incorporating the atmospheric river intensity scale into their forecasts, telling people whether the atmospheric river will be beneficial or if they need to prepare for a serious storm.

#

AGU (www.agu.org) is a global community supporting more than half a million advocates and professionals in Earth and space sciences. Through broad and inclusive partnerships, AGU aims to advance discovery and solution science that accelerate knowledge and create solutions that are ethical, unbiased and respectful of communities and their values. Our programs include serving as a scholarly publisher, convening virtual and in-person events and providing career support. We live our values in everything we do, such as our net zero energy renovated building in Washington, D.C. and our Ethics and Equity Center, which fosters a diverse and inclusive geoscience community to ensure responsible conduct.

*****

Notes for Journalists:

This study is published with open access and is freely available. Download a pdf copy of the paper here.

Paper title:

“Global application of the atmospheric river scale”

Authors:

Bin Guan (corresponding author), Duane E. Waliser, Joint Institute for Regional Earth System Science and Engineering, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA F. Martin Ralph, Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, San Diego, California, USA END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
The world’s atmospheric rivers now have an intensity ranking like hurricanes The world’s atmospheric rivers now have an intensity ranking like hurricanes 2 The world’s atmospheric rivers now have an intensity ranking like hurricanes 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Complex learned social behavior discovered in bee’s ‘waggle dance’

Complex learned social behavior discovered in bee’s ‘waggle dance’
2023-03-09
Passing down shared knowledge from one generation to the next is a hallmark of culture and allows animals to rapidly adapt to a changing environment. While widely evident in species ranging from human infants to naked mole rats or fledgling songbirds, early social learning has now been documented in insects. Publishing in the journal Science, a University of California San Diego researcher and his colleagues uncovered evidence that social learning is fundamental for honey bees. Professor James Nieh of the School of Biological Sciences and his collaborators discovered that the “waggle dance,” which signals the location ...

Social signal learning enhances a honey bee’s waggle dance performance

2023-03-09
Social learning plays an important role in a honey bee’s ability to “waggle dance,” report researchers, who observed that honey bees not exposed to the dances of older, more experienced nestmates produced disordered dances full of errors. The findings demonstrate that social learning shapes this complex form of insect communication, just as it does in humans, birds, and other social vertebrate species. The waggle dance is a behavior that honey bee foragers use to communicate spatial information about the precise location of a food source to other nestmates. ...

Island dwarfs and giants are disproportionality prone to human-mediated extinctions

2023-03-09
Island dwarfs and giants are more susceptible to extinction than other species, particularly following the arrival of humans to their insular homes, according to a new analysis of island species over millions of years. The findings highlight the vulnerability of some of Earth’s most unique species and could be used to inform conservation strategies to preserve them. Although they cover less than 7% of the planet’s surface, islands are hotspots of biodiversity. Due to their isolation, islands often contain species ...

Presenting a synapse-by-synapse map of an insect’s brain

2023-03-09
Researchers have presented the connectome – or synaptic wiring diagram – of an entire Drosophila larva brain. This first-ever insect whole-brain connectome is larger and more complex than previously reported connectomes and represents a valuable resource for future experimental and theoretical studies of neural circuits and brain function. The brain comprises complex networks of interconnected neurons that communicate through synapses. Understanding the brain’s network architecture is critical to understanding brain function. However, due to technological constraints, imaging entire brains with electron microscopy (EM) and reconstructing ...

The “MIDAS” platform detects protein-metabolite interactions

2023-03-09
To help improve the discovery and characterization of elusive interactions between proteins and metabolites, researchers present MIDAS (Mass spectrometry Integrated with equilibrium Dialysis for the discovery of Allostery Systematically). According to the authors, MIDAS represents a powerful new tool to “identify, understand, and exploit previously unknown modes of metabolic regulation across the protein-metabolite interactome.” The interactions between proteins and small-molecule metabolites are among the most common and fundamental types of biological interaction and play vital ...

Insular dwarfs and giants more likely to go extinct

Insular dwarfs and giants more likely to go extinct
2023-03-09
Leipzig/Halle. Islands are “laboratories of evolution” and home to animal species with many unique features, including dwarfs that evolved to very small sizes compared to their mainland relatives, and giants that evolved to large sizes. A team of researchers from the German Centre of Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) and Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU) has now found that species that evolved to more extreme body sizes compared to their mainland relatives have a higher risk of extinction than those that evolved to less extreme sizes. Their study, which was published in Science, also shows that extinction rates of mammals ...

Honey bees use social learning to improve waggle dancing

Honey bees use social learning to improve waggle dancing
2023-03-09
In a study published in Science, researchers from the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden (XTBG) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of California San Diego have shown that honey bees use social signal learning to improve their ability to waggle dance. Social learning shapes honey bee signaling, as it does communication in human infants, birds, and several other vertebrate species, according to the researchers. Social learning occurs when one individual learns by observing or interacting with another. Eusocial insects (i.e., insects with an advanced level of social ...

Scientists call for global push to eliminate space junk

Scientists call for global push to eliminate space junk
2023-03-09
Scientists have called for a legally-binding treaty to ensure Earth’s orbit isn’t irreparably harmed by the future expansion of the global space industry. In the week that nearly 200 countries agreed to a treaty to protect the High Seas after a 20-year process, the experts believe society needs to take the lessons learned from one part of our planet to another.  The number of satellites in orbit is expected to increase from 9,000 today to over 60,000 by 2030, with estimates suggesting there ...

First wiring map of neurons in insect brain complete

2023-03-09
Researchers have built the first ever map showing every single neuron and how they’re wired together in the brain of the fruit fly larva. This huge step forwards in science will ultimately help us understand the basic principles by which signals travel through the brain at the neural level and lead to behaviour and learning.   The map of the 3016 neurons that make up the larva’s brain and the detailed circuitry of neural pathways within it is known as a ‘connectome’. It’s the largest complete brain connectome described yet. Professor Marta Zlatic ...

Large-scale study enables new insights into rare eye disorders

Large-scale study enables new insights into rare eye disorders
2023-03-09
Researchers have analysed image and genomic data from the UK Biobank to find insights into rare diseases of the human eye. These include retinal dystrophies – a group of inherited disorders affecting the retina – which are also the leading cause of blindness certification in working-age adults. The retina is found at the back of the eye. It’s a layered tissue that receives light and converts it into a signal that can be interpreted by the brain. Each retinal layer comprises different cell types that play a unique role in this light conversion process. For this study published in the journal PLOS Genetics, the researchers focused ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Positive emotions plus deep sleep equals longer-lasting perceptual memories

Self-assembling cerebral blood vessels: A breakthrough in Alzheimer’s treatment

Adverse childhood experiences in firstborns associated with poor mental health of siblings

Montana State scientists publish new research on ancient life found in Yellowstone hot springs

Generative AI bias poses risk to democratic values

Study examines how African farmers are adapting to mountain climate change

Exposure to air pollution associated with more hospital admissions for lower respiratory infections

Microscopy approach offers new way to study cancer therapeutics at single-cell level

How flooding soybeans in early reproductive stages impacts yield, seed composition

Gene therapy may be “one shot stop” for rare bone disease

Protection for small-scale producers and the environment?

Researchers solve a fluid mechanics mystery

New grant funds first-of-its-kind gene therapy to treat aggressive brain cancer

HHS external communications pause prevents critical updates on current public health threats

New ACP guideline on migraine prevention shows no clinically important advantages for newer, expensive medications

Revolutionary lubricant prevents friction at high temperatures

Do women talk more than men? It might depend on their age

The right kind of fusion neutrons

The cost of preventing extinction of Australia’s priority species

JMIR Publications announces new CEO

NCSA awards 17 students Fiddler Innovation Fellowships

How prenatal alcohol exposure affects behavior into adulthood

Does the neuron know the electrode is there?

Vilcek Foundation celebrates immigrant scientists with $250,000 in prizes

Age and sex differences in efficacy of treatments for type 2 diabetes

Octopuses have some of the oldest known sex chromosomes

High-yield rice breed emits up to 70% less methane

Long COVID prevalence and associated activity limitation in US children

Intersection of race and rurality with health care–associated infections and subsequent outcomes

Risk of attempted and completed suicide in persons diagnosed with headache

[Press-News.org] The world’s atmospheric rivers now have an intensity ranking like hurricanes
The metric to measure these storms is ready for prime-time use around the world