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Publication
Featured researches published by Enric Aguilar.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006
Lisa V. Alexander; Xuebin Zhang; Thomas C. Peterson; John Caesar; Byron E. Gleason; A. M. G. Klein Tank; M. R. Haylock; Dean Collins; Blair Trewin; F. Rahimzadeh; A. Tagipour; K. Rupa Kumar; J. V. Revadekar; G. Griffiths; Lucie A. Vincent; David B. Stephenson; J. Burn; Enric Aguilar; Manola Brunet; Michael A. Taylor; Mark New; P. Zhai; Matilde Rusticucci; J. L. Vazquez‐Aguirre
A suite of climate change indices derived from daily temperature and precipitation data, with a primary focus on extreme events, were computed and analyzed. By setting an exact formula for each index and using specially designed software, analyses done in different countries have been combined seamlessly. This has enabled the presentation of the most up-to-date and comprehensive global picture of trends in extreme temperature and precipitation indices using results from a number of workshops held in data-sparse regions and high-quality station data supplied by numerous scientists world wide. Seasonal and annual indices for the period 1951-2003 were gridded. Trends in the gridded fields were computed and tested for statistical significance. Results showed widespread significant changes in temperature extremes associated with warming, especially for those indices derived from daily minimum temperature. Over 70% of the global land area sampled showed a significant decrease in the annual occurrence of cold nights and a significant increase in the annual occurrence of warm nights. Some regions experienced a more than doubling of these indices. This implies a positive shift in the distribution of daily minimum temperature throughout the globe. Daily maximum temperature indices showed similar changes but with smaller magnitudes. Precipitation changes showed a widespread and significant increase, but the changes are much less spatially coherent compared with temperature change. Probability distributions of indices derived from approximately 200 temperature and 600 precipitation stations, with near-complete data for 1901-2003 and covering a very large region of the Northern Hemisphere midlatitudes (and parts of Australia for precipitation) were analyzed for the periods 1901-1950, 1951-1978 and 1979-2003. Results indicate a significant warming throughout the 20th century. Differences in temperature indices distributions are particularly pronounced between the most recent two periods and for those indices related to minimum temperature. An analysis of those indices for which seasonal time series are available shows that these changes occur for all seasons although they are generally least pronounced for September to November. Precipitation indices show a tendency toward wetter conditions throughout the 20th century.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2005
Enric Aguilar; Thomas C. Peterson; P. Ramı́rez Obando; R. Frutos; J. A. Retana; M. Solera; J. Soley; I. González Garcı́a; R. Araujo; A. Rosa Santos; V. E. Valle; Manola Brunet; L. Aguilar; Lázaro Álvarez; María Bautista; C. Castañón; Leonor Herrera; E. Ruano; J. J. Sinay; Eduardo Sánchez; G. I. Hernández Oviedo; F. Obed; J. E. Salgado; Juan Vázquez; M. Baca; Miguel Gutiérrez; C. Centella; J. R. Espinosa; Domingo Martínez; B. Olmedo
[1]xa0In November 2004, a regional climate change workshop was held in Guatemala with the goal of analyzing how climate extremes had changed in the region. Scientists from Central America and northern South America brought long-term daily temperature and precipitation time series from meteorological stations in their countries to the workshop. After undergoing careful quality control procedures and a homogeneity assessment, the data were used to calculate a suite of climate change indices over the 1961–2003 period. Analysis of these indices reveals a general warming trend in the region. The occurrence of extreme warm maximum and minimum temperatures has increased while extremely cold temperature events have decreased. Precipitation indices, despite the large and expected spatial variability, indicate that although no significant increases in the total amount are found, rainfall events are intensifying and the contribution of wet and very wet days are enlarging. Temperature and precipitation indices were correlated with northern and equatorial Atlantic and Pacific Ocean sea surface temperatures. However, those indices having the largest significant trends (percentage of warm days, precipitation intensity, and contribution from very wet days) have low correlations to El Nino–Southern Oscillation. Additionally, precipitation indices show a higher correlation with tropical Atlantic sea surface temperatures.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006
Anders Moberg; P. D. Jones; David Lister; Alexander Walther; Manola Brunet; Jucundus Jacobeit; Lisa V. Alexander; Paul M. Della-Marta; Jürg Luterbacher; Pascal Yiou; Deliang Chen; Albert Klein Tank; Óscar Saladié; Javier Sigró; Enric Aguilar; Hans Alexandersson; Carlos Almarza; Ingeborg Auer; Mariano Barriendos; Michael Begert; Hans Bergström; Reinhard Böhm; C. J. Butler; John Caesar; Achim Drebs; Dmitra Founda; Friedrich-Wilhelm Gerstengarbe; Giusi Micela; Maurizio Maugeri; Hermann Österle
[1]xa0We analyze century-long daily temperature and precipitation records for stations in Europe west of 60°E. A set of climatic indices derived from the daily series, mainly focusing on extremes, is defined. Linear trends in these indices are assessed over the period 1901–2000. Average trends, for 75 stations mostly representing Europe west of 20°E, show a warming for all temperature indices. Winter has, on average, warmed more (∼1.0°C/100 yr) than summer (∼0.8°C), both for daily maximum (TX) and minimum (TN) temperatures. Overall, the warming of TX in winter was stronger in the warm tail than in the cold tail (1.6 and 1.5°C for 98th and 95th, but ∼1.0°C for 2nd, 5th and 10th percentiles). There are, however, large regional differences in temperature trend patterns. For summer, there is a tendency for stronger warming, both for TX and TN, in the warm than in the cold tail only in parts of central Europe. Winter precipitation totals, averaged over 121 European stations north of 40°N, have increased significantly by ∼12% per 100 years. Trends in 90th, 95th and 98th percentiles of daily winter precipitation have been similar. No overall long-term trend occurred in summer precipitation totals, but there is an overall weak (statistically insignificant and regionally dependent) tendency for summer precipitation to have become slightly more intense but less common. Data inhomogeneities and relative sparseness of station density in many parts of Europe preclude more robust conclusions. It is of importance that new methods are developed for homogenizing daily data.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007
Manola Brunet; P. D. Jones; Javier Sigró; Óscar Saladié; Enric Aguilar; Anders Moberg; Paul M. Della-Marta; David Lister; Alexander Walther; Diego López
We analyze temporal and spatial patterns of temperature change over Spain during the period 1850–2005, using daily maximum (T max), minimum (T min), and mean (T mean) temperatures from the 22 longe ...
Journal of Climate | 2006
T. J. Ansell; P. D. Jones; Rob Allan; David Lister; D. E. Parker; Manola Brunet; Anders Moberg; Jucundus Jacobeit; Philip Brohan; Nick Rayner; Enric Aguilar; Hans Alexandersson; Mariano Barriendos; Theo Brandsma; Nicholas J. Cox; Paul M. Della-Marta; Achim Drebs; D. Founda; Friedrich-Wilhelm Gerstengarbe; K. Hickey; Trausti Jónsson; Jürg Luterbacher; Øyvind Nordli; H. Oesterle; M. Petrakis; Andreas Philipp; Mark J. Rodwell; Óscar Saladié; Javier Sigró; Victoria C. Slonosky
Abstract The development of a daily historical European–North Atlantic mean sea level pressure dataset (EMSLP) for 1850–2003 on a 5° latitude by longitude grid is described. This product was produced using 86 continental and island stations distributed over the region 25°–70°N, 70°W–50°E blended with marine data from the International Comprehensive Ocean–Atmosphere Data Set (ICOADS). The EMSLP fields for 1850–80 are based purely on the land station data and ship observations. From 1881, the blended land and marine fields are combined with already available daily Northern Hemisphere fields. Complete coverage is obtained by employing reduced space optimal interpolation. Squared correlations (ru200a2) indicate that EMSLP generally captures 80%–90% of daily variability represented in an existing historical mean sea level pressure product and over 90% in modern 40-yr European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Re-Analyses (ERA-40) over most of the region. A lack of sufficient observations over Greenland and...
International Journal of Climatology | 2006
Manola Brunet; Óscar Saladié; P. D. Jones; Javier Sigró; Enric Aguilar; Anders Moberg; David Lister; Alexander Walther; Diego López; Carlos Almarza
International Journal of Climatology | 2011
Manola Brunet; Jesús Asín; Javier Sigró; Manuel Bañón; Francisco García García; Enric Aguilar; Juan Esteban Palenzuela; Thomas C. Peterson; P. D. Jones
Archive | 2008
Javier Sigró; Manola Brunet; Enric Aguilar
Archive | 2008
Arturo Sanchez-Lorenzo; A Sigro; J. Calbó; Javier Martin-Vide; Manola Brunet; Enric Aguilar; M Brunetti
Archive | 2008
Javier Sigró; Manola Brunet; Enric Aguilar