Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Geert Lenderink is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Geert Lenderink.


Reviews of Geophysics | 2014

Future changes to the intensity and frequency of short‐duration extreme rainfall

Seth Westra; Hayley J. Fowler; Jason P. Evans; Lisa V. Alexander; Peter Berg; Fiona Johnson; Elizabeth J. Kendon; Geert Lenderink; Nigel Roberts

Evidence that extreme rainfall intensity is increasing at the global scale has strengthened considerably in recent years. Research now indicates that the greatest increases are likely to occur in short-duration storms lasting less than a day, potentially leading to an increase in the magnitude and frequency of flash floods. This review examines the evidence for subdaily extreme rainfall intensification due to anthropogenic climate change and describes our current physical understanding of the association between subdaily extreme rainfall intensity and atmospheric temperature. We also examine the nature, quality, and quantity of information needed to allow society to adapt successfully to predicted future changes, and discuss the roles of observational and modeling studies in helping us to better understand the physical processes that can influence subdaily extreme rainfall characteristics. We conclude by describing the types of research required to produce a more thorough understanding of the relationships between local-scale thermodynamic effects, large-scale atmospheric circulation, and subdaily extreme rainfall intensity.


Journal of Climate | 2005

Soil Control on Runoff Response to Climate Change in Regional Climate Model Simulations

B. J. J. M. van den Hurk; Martin Hirschi; Christoph Schär; Geert Lenderink; E. van Meijgaard; A. P. van Ulden; Burkhardt Rockel; Stefan Hagemann; Phil Graham; Erik Kjellström; Richard G. Jones

Simulations with seven regional climate models driven by a common control climate simulation of a GCM carried out for Europe in the context of the (European Union) EU-funded Prediction of Regional scenarios and Uncertainties for Defining European Climate change risks and Effects (PRUDENCE) project were analyzed with respect to land surface hydrology in the Rhine basin. In particular, the annual cycle of the terrestrial water storage was compared to analyses based on the 40-yr ECMWF Re-Analysis (ERA-40) atmospheric convergence and observed Rhine discharge data. In addition, an analysis was made of the partitioning of convergence anomalies over anomalies in runoff and storage. This analysis revealed that most models underestimate the size of the water storage and consequently overestimated the response of runoff to anomalies in net convergence. The partitioning of these anomalies over runoff and storage was indicative for the response of the simulated runoff to a projected climate change consistent with the greenhouse gas A2 Synthesis Report on Emission Scenarios (SRES). In particular, the annual cycle of runoff is affected largely by the terrestrial storage reservoir. Larger storage capacity leads to smaller changes in both wintertime and summertime monthly mean runoff. The sustained summertime evaporation resulting from larger storage reservoirs may have a noticeable impact on the summertime surface temperature projections.


Climate Dynamics | 2013

SST and circulation trend biases cause an underestimation of European precipitation trends

Ronald van Haren; Geert Jan van Oldenborgh; Geert Lenderink; Matthew D. Collins; Wilco Hazeleger

Clear precipitation trends have been observed in Europe over the past century. In winter, precipitation has increased in north-western Europe. In summer, there has been an increase along many coasts in the same area. Over the second half of the past century precipitation also decreased in southern Europe in winter. An investigation of precipitation trends in two multi-model ensembles including both global and regional climate models shows that these models fail to reproduce the observed trends. In many regions the model spread does not cover the trend in the observations. In contrast, regional climate model (RCM) experiments with observed boundary conditions reproduce the observed precipitation trends much better. The observed trends are largely compatible with the range of uncertainties spanned by the ensemble, indicating that the boundary conditions of RCMs are responsible for large parts of the trend biases. We find that the main factor in setting the trend in winter is atmospheric circulation, for summer sea surface temperature (SST) is important in setting precipitation trends along the North Sea and Atlantic coasts. The causes of the large trends in atmospheric circulation and summer SST are not known. For SST there may be a connection with the well-known ocean circulation biases in low-resolution ocean models. A quantitative understanding of the causes of these trends is needed so that climate model based projections of future climate can be corrected for these precipitation trend biases.


Monthly Weather Review | 2005

Intercomparison and interpretation of single-column model simulations of a nocturnal stratocumulus-topped marine boundary layer

Ping Zhu; Christopher S. Bretherton; M. Kohler; Anning Cheng; Andreas Chlond; Quanzhen Geng; Phil Austin; Jean-Christophe Golaz; Geert Lenderink; A. P. Lock; Bjorn Stevens

Ten single-column models (SCMs) from eight groups are used to simulate a nocturnal nonprecipitating marine stratocumulus-topped mixed layer as part of an intercomparison organized by the Global Energy and Water Cycle Experiment Cloud System Study, Working Group 1. The case is idealized from observations from the Dynamics and Chemistry of Marine Stratocumulus II, Research Flight 1. SCM simulations with operational resolution are supplemented by high-resolution simulations and compared with observations and large-eddy simulations. All participating SCMs are able to maintain a sharp inversion and a mixed cloud-topped layer, although the moisture profiles show a slight gradient in the mixed layer and produce entrainment rates broadly consistent with observations, but the liquid water paths vary by a factor of 10 after onl y1ho fsimulation at both high and operational resolution. Sensitivity tests show insensitivity to activation of precipitation and shallow convection schemes in most models, as one would observationally expect for this case.


Climatic Change | 2007

Circulation statistics and climate change in Central Europe: PRUDENCE simulations and observations

Aad van Ulden; Geert Lenderink; Bart van den Hurk; Erik van Meijgaard

PRUDENCE simulations of the climate in Central Europe are analysed with respect to mean temperature, mean precipitation and three monthly mean geostrophic circulation indices. The three global models show important circulation biases in the control climate, in particular in the strength of the west-circulations in winter and summer. The nine regional models inherit much of the circulation biases from their host model, especially in winter. In summer, the regional models show a larger spread in circulation statistics, depending on nesting procedures and other model characteristics. Simulated circulation biases appear to have a significant inluence on simulated temperature and precipitation. The PRUDENCE ensemble appears to be biased towards warmer and wetter than observed circulations in winter, and towards warmer and dryer circulations in summer. A2-scenario simulations show important circulation changes, which have a significant impact on changes in the distributions of monthly mean temperature and precipitation. It is likely that interactions between land–surface processes and atmospheric circulation play an important role in the simulated changes in the summer climate in Central Europe.


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2013

Understanding Convective Extreme Precipitation Scaling Using Observations and an Entraining Plume Model

J.M. Loriaux; Geert Lenderink; S. R. de Roode; A. P. Siebesma

Previously observed twice-Clausius–Clapeyron (2CC) scaling for extreme precipitation at hourly time scales has led to discussions about its origin. The robustness of this scaling is assessed by analyzing a subhourly dataset of 10-min resolution over the Netherlands. The results confirm the validity of the previously found 2CC scaling for extreme convective precipitation. Using a simple entraining plume model, an idealized deep convective environmental temperature profile is perturbed to analyze extreme precipitation scaling from a frequently used relation based on the column condensation rate. The plume model simulates a steady precipitation increase that is greater than Clausius–Clapeyron scaling (super-CC scaling). Precipitation intensity increase is shown to be controlled by a flux of moisture through the cloud base and in-cloud lateral moisture convergence. Decomposition of this scaling relation into a dominant thermodynamic and additional dynamic component allows for better understanding of the scaling and demonstrates the importance of vertical velocity in both dynamic and thermodynamic scaling. Furthermore, systematically increasing the environmental stability by adjusting the temperature perturbations from constant to moist adiabatic increase reveals a dependence of the scaling on the change in environmental stability. As the perturbations become increasingly close to moist adiabatic, the scaling found by the entraining plume model decreases to CC scaling. Thus, atmospheric stability changes, which are expected to be dependent on the latitude, may well play a key role in the behavior of precipitation extremes in the future climate.


Monthly Weather Review | 2004

An Evaluation of Mass Flux Closures for Diurnal Cycles of Shallow Cumulus

Roel Neggers; A. P. Siebesma; Geert Lenderink; A. A. M. Holtslag

Three closure methods for the mass flux at cloud base in shallow cumulus convection are critically examined for the difficult case of a diurnal cycle over land. The closure methods are first evaluated against large-eddy simulations (LESs) by diagnosing all parameters appearing in the closure equations during simulations of two different observed diurnal cycles of shallow cumulus. This reveals the characteristic behavior of each closure mechanism purely as a result of its core structure. With these results in hand the impact of each closure on the development of the cloudy boundary layer is then studied by its implementation in an offline single-column model of a regional atmospheric climate model. The LES results show that the boundary layer quasi-equilibrium closure typically overestimates the cloud-base mass flux after cloud onset, due to the neglect of significant moisture and temperature tendencies in the subcloud layer. The convective available potential energy (CAPE) adjustment closure is compromised by its limitation to compensating subsidence as the only CAPE breakdown mechanism and the use of a constant adjustment time scale. The closure method using the subcloud convective vertical velocity scale gives the best results, as it catches the time development of the cloud-base mass flux as diagnosed in LES.


Environmental Research Letters | 2014

Extreme precipitation response to climate perturbations in an atmospheric mesoscale model

Jisk Attema; Jessica M. Loriaux; Geert Lenderink

Observations of extreme (sub) hourly precipitation at midlatitudes show a large dependency on the dew point temperature often close to 14% per degree—2 times the dependency of the specific humidity on dew point temperature which is given by the Clausius–Clapeyron (CC) relation. By simulating a selection of 11 cases over the Netherlands characterized by intense showers, we investigate this behavior in the nonhydrostatic weather prediction model Harmonie at a resolution of 2.5 km. These experiments are repeated using perturbations of the atmospheric profiles of temperature and humidity: (i) using an idealized approach with a 2o warmer (colder) atmosphere assuming constant relative humidity, and (ii) using changes in temperature and humidity derived from a long climate change simulation at 2o global warming. All perturbations have a difference in the local dew point temperature compared to the reference of approximately 2o. Differences are considerable between the cases, with dependencies ranging from almost zero to an increase of 18% per degree rise of the dew point temperature. On average however, we find an increase of extreme precipitation intensity of 11% per degree for the idealized perturbation, and 9% per degree for the climate change perturbation. For the most extreme events these dependencies appear to approach a rate of 11–14% per degree, in closer agreement with the observed relation.


Monthly Weather Review | 2017

The HARMONIE–AROME Model Configuration in the ALADIN–HIRLAM NWP System

Lisa Bengtsson; Ulf Andrae; Trygve Aspelien; Yurii Batrak; Javier Calvo; Wim C. de Rooy; Emily Gleeson; Bent Hansen-Sass; Mariken Homleid; Mariano Hortal; Karl-Ivar Ivarsson; Geert Lenderink; Sami Niemelä; Kristian Pagh Nielsen; Jeanette Onvlee; Laura Rontu; Patrick Samuelsson; Daniel Santos Muñoz; Alvaro Subias; Sander Tijm; Velle Toll; Xiaohua Yang; Morten Ødegaard Køltzow

AbstractThe aim of this article is to describe the reference configuration of the convection-permitting numerical weather prediction (NWP) model HARMONIE-AROME, which is used for operational short-range weather forecasts in Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Ireland, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, and Sweden. It is developed, maintained, and validated as part of the shared ALADIN–HIRLAM system by a collaboration of 26 countries in Europe and northern Africa on short-range mesoscale NWP. HARMONIE–AROME is based on the model AROME developed within the ALADIN consortium. Along with the joint modeling framework, AROME was implemented and utilized in both northern and southern European conditions by the above listed countries, and this activity has led to extensive updates to the model’s physical parameterizations. In this paper the authors present the differences in model dynamics and physical parameterizations compared with AROME, as well as important configuration choices of the reference, such...


Environmental Research Letters | 2015

A simple scaling approach to produce climate scenarios of local precipitation extremes for the Netherlands

Geert Lenderink; Jisk Attema

Scenarios of future changes in small scale precipitation extremes for the Netherlands are presented. These scenarios are based on a new approach whereby changes in precipitation extremes are set proportional to the change in water vapor amount near the surface as measured by the 2m dew point temperature. This simple scaling framework allows the integration of information derived from: (i) observations, (ii) a new unprecedentedly large 16 member ensemble of simulations with the regional climate model RACMO2 driven by EC-Earth, and (iii) short term integrations with a non-hydrostatic model Harmonie. Scaling constants are based on subjective weighting (expert judgement) of the three different information sources taking also into account previously published work. In all scenarios local precipitation extremes increase with warming, yet with broad uncertainty ranges expressing incomplete knowledge of how convective clouds and the atmospheric mesoscale circulation will react to climate change.

Collaboration


Dive into the Geert Lenderink's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

B. J. J. M. van den Hurk

Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

E. van Meijgaard

Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wilco Hazeleger

Wageningen University and Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

G. J. van Oldenborgh

Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Erik van Meijgaard

Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Erik Kjellström

Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Seth Westra

University of Adelaide

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. P. Siebesma

Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. P. van Ulden

Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge