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Dive into the research topics where Emmanouil Flaounas is active.

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Featured researches published by Emmanouil Flaounas.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2016

Med-CORDEX initiative for Mediterranean climate studies

Paolo Michele Ruti; Samuel Somot; Filippo Giorgi; Clotilde Dubois; Emmanouil Flaounas; Anika Obermann; A. Dell’aquila; G. Pisacane; Ali Harzallah; E. Lombardi; Bodo Ahrens; Naveed Akhtar; Antoinette Alias; Thomas Arsouze; R. Aznar; Sophie Bastin; Judit Bartholy; Karine Béranger; Jonathan Beuvier; Sophie Bouffies-Cloché; J. Brauch; William Cabos; Sandro Calmanti; Jean-Christophe Calvet; Adriana Carillo; Dario Conte; Erika Coppola; V. Djurdjevic; Philippe Drobinski; A. Elizalde-Arellano

The Mediterranean is expected to be one of the most prominent and vulnerable climate change “hot spots” of the 21st century, and the physical mechanisms underlying this finding are still not clear. Furthermore complex interactions and feedbacks involving ocean-atmosphere-land-biogeochemical processes play a prominent role in modulating the climate and environment of the Mediterranean region on a range of spatial and temporal scales. Therefore it is critical to provide robust climate change information for use in Vulnerability/Impact/Adaptation assessment studies considering the Mediterranean as a fully coupled environmental system. The Med-CORDEX initiative aims at coordinating the Mediterranean climate modeling community towards the development of fully coupled regional climate simulations, improving all relevant components of the system, from atmosphere and ocean dynamics to land surface, hydrology and biogeochemical processes. The primary goals of Med-CORDEX are to improve understanding of past climate variability and trends, and to provide more accurate and reliable future projections, assessing in a quantitative and robust way the added value of using high resolution and coupled regional climate models. The coordination activities and the scientific outcomes of Med-CORDEX can produce an important framework to foster the development of regional earth system models in several key regions worldwide.


Climate Dynamics | 2013

Evaluation of regional climate simulations for air quality modelling purposes

Laurent Menut; Om P. Tripathi; Augustin Colette; Robert Vautard; Emmanouil Flaounas; Bertrand Bessagnet

In order to evaluate the future potential benefits of emission regulation on regional air quality, while taking into account the effects of climate change, off-line air quality projection simulations are driven using weather forcing taken from regional climate models. These regional models are themselves driven by simulations carried out using global climate models (GCM) and economical scenarios. Uncertainties and biases in climate models introduce an additional “climate modeling” source of uncertainty that is to be added to all other types of uncertainties in air quality modeling for policy evaluation. In this article we evaluate the changes in air quality-related weather variables induced by replacing reanalyses-forced by GCM-forced regional climate simulations. As an example we use GCM simulations carried out in the framework of the ERA-interim programme and of the CMIP5 project using the Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace climate model (IPSLcm), driving regional simulations performed in the framework of the EURO-CORDEX programme. In summer, we found compensating deficiencies acting on photochemistry: an overestimation by GCM-driven weather due to a positive bias in short-wave radiation, a negative bias in wind speed, too many stagnant episodes, and a negative temperature bias. In winter, air quality is mostly driven by dispersion, and we could not identify significant differences in either wind or planetary boundary layer height statistics between GCM-driven and reanalyses-driven regional simulations. However, precipitation appears largely overestimated in GCM-driven simulations, which could significantly affect the simulation of aerosol concentrations. The identification of these biases will help interpreting results of future air quality simulations using these data. Despite these, we conclude that the identified differences should not lead to major difficulties in using GCM-driven regional climate simulations for air quality projections.


Environmental Research Letters | 2012

Assessment of gridded observations used for climate model validation in the Mediterranean region: the HyMeX and MED-CORDEX framework

Emmanouil Flaounas; Philippe Drobinski; Marco Borga; Jean-Christophe Calvet; Guy Delrieu; Efrat Morin; Gianni Tartari; Roberta Toffolon

This letter assesses the quality of temperature and rainfall daily retrievals of the European Climate Assessment and Dataset (ECA&D) with respect to measurements collected locally in various parts of the Euro-Mediterranean region in the framework of the Hydrological Cycle in the Mediterranean Experiment (HyMeX), endorsed by the Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment (GEWEX) of the World Climate Research Program (WCRP). The ECA&D, among other gridded datasets, is very often used as a reference for model calibration and evaluation. This is for instance the case in the context of the WCRP Coordinated Regional Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX) and its Mediterranean declination MED-CORDEX. This letter quantifies ECA&D dataset uncertainties associated with temperature and precipitation intra-seasonal variability, seasonal distribution and extremes. Our motivation is to help the interpretation of the results when validating or calibrating downscaling models by the ECA&D dataset in the context of regional climate research in the Euro-Mediterranean region.


Climate Dynamics | 2013

Dynamical downscaling of IPSL-CM5 CMIP5 historical simulations over the Mediterranean: benefits on the representation of regional surface winds and cyclogenesis

Emmanouil Flaounas; Philippe Drobinski; Sophie Bastin

The Mediterranean region is identified as one of the two main hot-spots of climate change and also known to have the highest concentration of cyclones in the world. These atmospheric features contribute significantly to the regional climate but they are not reproduced by the Atmosphere–Ocean General Circulation Models (AOGCM), due to their coarse horizontal resolution, which have recently been run in the frame of the 5th Climate Model Intercomparison Project. This article investigates the benefit of dynamically downscaling the Institut Pierre Simon Laplace (IPSL) AOGCM (IPSL-CM5) historical simulation by the weather and research forecasting (WRF) for the representation of the Mediterranean surface winds and cyclonic activity. Indeed, when considering IPSL-CM5 atmospheric fields, the dramatic underestimation of the cyclonic activity in the most cyclogenetic region of the world jeopardizes our ability to investigate in-depth the Mediterranean regional climate and trend in the context of global change. The WRF model shows remarkable skill to reproduce regional cyclogenesis. Indeed, cyclones occurrence is quasi-absent in IPSL-CM5 data but when applying dynamical downscaling their spatial–temporal variability is very close to the re-analysis. This is a clear benefit of dynamical downscaling in regions of strong topographic forcing. This “steady” source of forcing allows the production of lee cyclogenesis and the development of strong cyclones, whatever the quality of the large-scale circulation provided at the WRF’s boundaries by IPSL-CM5. However, dynamical downscaling still presents disadvantages as for instance the fact that large-scale inaccurate features of the IPSL-CM5 regional circulation are replicated by WRF due to the boundary controlled (small domain) simulation. The advantages and disadvantages of dynamical downscaling are thoroughly discussed in this paper revealing its importance for climate research, especially in the context of future scenarios and wind impacts.


Climate Dynamics | 2018

North-western Mediterranean sea-breeze circulation in a regional climate system model

Philippe Drobinski; Sophie Bastin; Thomas Arsouze; Karine Béranger; Emmanouil Flaounas; Marc Stéfanon

In the Mediterranean basin, moisture transport can occur over large distance from remote regions by the synoptic circulation or more locally by sea breezes, driven by land-sea thermal contrast. Sea breezes play an important role in inland transport of moisture especially between late spring and early fall. In order to explicitly represent the two-way interactions at the atmosphere-ocean interface in the Mediterranean region and quantify the role of air-sea feedbacks on regional meteorology and climate, simulations at 20 km resolution performed with WRF regional climate model (RCM) and MORCE atmosphere-ocean regional climate model (AORCM) coupling WRF and NEMO-MED12 in the frame of HyMeX/MED-CORDEX are compared. One result of this study is that these simulations reproduce remarkably well the intensity, direction and inland penetration of the sea breeze and even the existence of the shallow sea breeze despite the overestimate of temperature over land in both simulations. The coupled simulation provides a more realistic representation of the evolution of the SST field at fine scale than the atmosphere-only one. Temperature and moisture anomalies are created in direct response to the SST anomaly and are advected by the sea breeze over land. However, the SST anomalies are not of sufficient magnitude to affect the large-scale sea-breeze circulation. The temperature anomalies are quickly damped by strong surface heating over land, whereas the water vapor mixing ratio anomalies are transported further inland. The inland limit of significance is imposed by the vertical dilution in a deeper continental boundary-layer.


Climate Dynamics | 2013

Precipitation and temperature space–time variability and extremes in the Mediterranean region: evaluation of dynamical and statistical downscaling methods

Emmanouil Flaounas; Philippe Drobinski; Mathieu Vrac; Sophie Bastin; Cindy Lebeaupin-Brossier; Marc Stéfanon; Marco Borga; Jean-Christophe Calvet


Climate Dynamics | 2014

The atmospheric component of the Mediterranean Sea water budget in a WRF multi-physics ensemble and observations

Alejandro Di Luca; Emmanouil Flaounas; Philippe Drobinski; Cindy Lebeaupin Brossier


Geoscientific Model Development | 2014

CycloTRACK (v1.0) – tracking winter extratropical cyclones based on relative vorticity: sensitivity to data filtering and other relevant parameters

Emmanouil Flaounas; V. Kotroni; K. Lagouvardos; I. Flaounas


Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2016

Influence of submonthly air–sea coupling on heavy precipitation events in the Western Mediterranean basin

Ségolène Berthou; Sylvain Mailler; Philippe Drobinski; Thomas Arsouze; Sophie Bastin; Karine Béranger; Emmanouil Flaounas; Cindy Lebeaupin Brossier; Samuel Somot; Marc Stéfanon


Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2016

Processes leading to heavy precipitation associated with two Mediterranean cyclones observed during the HyMeX SOP1

Emmanouil Flaounas; Konstantinos Lagouvardos; Vassiliki Kotroni; Chantal Claud; Julien Delanoë; Cyrille Flamant; Erica Madonna; Heini Wernli

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Konstantinos Lagouvardos

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Vassiliki Kotroni

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Thomas Arsouze

Université Paris-Saclay

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Guy Delrieu

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Mathieu Vrac

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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