Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jay H. Lawrimore is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jay H. Lawrimore.


Journal of Climate | 2008

Improvements to NOAA's Historical Merged Land-Ocean Surface Temperature Analysis (1880-2006)

Thomas M. Smith; Richard W. Reynolds; Thomas C. Peterson; Jay H. Lawrimore

Abstract Observations of sea surface and land–near-surface merged temperature anomalies are used to monitor climate variations and to evaluate climate simulations; therefore, it is important to make analyses of these data as accurate as possible. Analysis uncertainty occurs because of data errors and incomplete sampling over the historical period. This manuscript documents recent improvements in NOAA’s merged global surface temperature anomaly analysis, monthly, in spatial 5° grid boxes. These improvements allow better analysis of temperatures throughout the record, with the greatest improvements in the late nineteenth century and since 1985. Improvements in the late nineteenth century are due to improved tuning of the analysis methods. Beginning in 1985, improvements are due to the inclusion of bias-adjusted satellite data. The old analysis (version 2) was documented in 2005, and this improved analysis is called version 3.


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2004

Contemporary Changes of the Hydrological Cycle over the Contiguous United States: Trends Derived from In Situ Observations

Pavel Ya. Groisman; Richard W. Knight; Thomas R. Karl; David R. Easterling; Bomin Sun; Jay H. Lawrimore

Abstract Over the contiguous United States, precipitation, temperature, streamflow, and heavy and very heavy precipitation have increased during the twentieth century. In the east, high streamflow has increased as well. Soil wetness (as described by the Keetch–Byram Drought index) has increased over the northern and eastern regions of the United States, but in the southwestern quadrant of the country soil dryness has increased, making the region more susceptible to forest fires. In addition to these changes during the past 50 yr, increases in evaporation, near-surface humidity, total cloud cover, and low stratiform and cumulonimbus clouds have been observed. Snow cover has diminished earlier in the year in the west, and a decrease in near-surface wind speed has also occurred in many areas. Much of the increase in heavy and very heavy precipitation has occurred during the past three decades.


Journal of Climate | 2015

Extended Reconstructed Sea Surface Temperature Version 4 (ERSST.v4). Part I: Upgrades and Intercomparisons

Boyin Huang; Viva F. Banzon; Eric Freeman; Jay H. Lawrimore; Wei Liu; Thomas C. Peterson; Thomas M. Smith; Peter W. Thorne; Scott D. Woodruff; Huai-Min Zhang

AbstractThe monthly Extended Reconstructed Sea Surface Temperature (ERSST) dataset, available on global 2° × 2° grids, has been revised herein to version 4 (v4) from v3b. Major revisions include updated and substantially more complete input data from the International Comprehensive Ocean–Atmosphere Data Set (ICOADS) release 2.5; revised empirical orthogonal teleconnections (EOTs) and EOT acceptance criterion; updated sea surface temperature (SST) quality control procedures; revised SST anomaly (SSTA) evaluation methods; updated bias adjustments of ship SSTs using the Hadley Centre Nighttime Marine Air Temperature dataset version 2 (HadNMAT2); and buoy SST bias adjustment not previously made in v3b.Tests show that the impacts of the revisions to ship SST bias adjustment in ERSST.v4 are dominant among all revisions and updates. The effect is to make SST 0.1°–0.2°C cooler north of 30°S but 0.1°–0.2°C warmer south of 30°S in ERSST.v4 than in ERSST.v3b before 1940. In comparison with the Met Office SST product...


Science | 2015

Possible artifacts of data biases in the recent global surface warming hiatus

Thomas R. Karl; Anthony Arguez; Boyin Huang; Jay H. Lawrimore; James R. McMahon; Matthew J. Menne; Thomas C. Peterson; Russell S. Vose; Huai-Min Zhang

Walking back talk of the end of warming Previous analyses of global temperature trends during the first decade of the 21st century seemed to indicate that warming had stalled. This allowed critics of the idea of global warming to claim that concern about climate change was misplaced. Karl et al. now show that temperatures did not plateau as thought and that the supposed warming “hiatus” is just an artifact of earlier analyses. Warming has continued at a pace similar to that of the last half of the 20th century, and the slowdown was just an illusion. Science, this issue p. 1469 Updated global surface temperature data do not support the notion of a global warming “hiatus.” Much study has been devoted to the possible causes of an apparent decrease in the upward trend of global surface temperatures since 1998, a phenomenon that has been dubbed the global warming “hiatus.” Here, we present an updated global surface temperature analysis that reveals that global trends are higher than those reported by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, especially in recent decades, and that the central estimate for the rate of warming during the first 15 years of the 21st century is at least as great as the last half of the 20th century. These results do not support the notion of a “slowdown” in the increase of global surface temperature.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2001

Evaporation changes over the contiguous United States and the former USSR: A reassessment

Valentin S. Golubev; Jay H. Lawrimore; Pavel Groisman; Nina A. Speranskaya; Sergey A. Zhuravin; Matthew J. Menne; Thomas C. Peterson; Robert W. Malone

Observed decreases in pan evaporation over most of the United States and the former USSR during the post-WWII period, if interpreted as a decrease in actual evaporation, are at odds with increases in temperature and precipitation over many regions of these two countries. Using parallel observations of actual and pan evaporation at six Russian, one Latvian, and one U.S. experimental sites, we recalibrate trends in pan evaporation to make them more representative of actual evaporation changes. After applying this transformation, pan evaporation time series over southern Russia and most of the United States reveal an increasing trend in actual evaporation during the past forty years.


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2000

Pan Evaporation Trends in Dry and Humid Regions of the United States

Jay H. Lawrimore; Thomas C. Peterson

Abstract Decreasing pan evaporation trends in many regions of the world have been viewed as evidence of a decrease in the terrestrial evaporation component of the hydrologic cycle. However, some researchers suggest that the relationship between pan evaporation and terrestrial evaporation depends on the environment in which the measurements are recorded and that pan evaporation trends run counter to trends in terrestrial evaporation in some climates. To determine whether evidence of this kind of relationship exists in the observational record, pan evaporation trends were compared with precipitation trends in eight regions within the United States. To the extent that warm-season precipitation can be used as an indicator of surface evaporation, these results support the view that pan evaporation and actual evaporation can be inversely related.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2012

U.S. Climate Reference Network after One Decade of Operations: Status and Assessment

Howard J. Diamond; Thomas R. Karl; Michael A. Palecki; C. Bruce Baker; Jesse E. Bell; Ronald D. Leeper; David R. Easterling; Jay H. Lawrimore; Tilden P. Meyers; Michael R. Helfert; Grant Goodge; Peter W. Thorne

The year 2012 marks a decade of observations undertaken by the U.S. Climate Reference Network (USCRN) under the auspices of NOAAs National Climatic Data Center and Atmospheric Turbulence and Diffusion Division. The network consists of 114 sites across the conterminous 48 states, with additional sites in Alaska and Hawaii. Stations are installed in open (where possible), rural sites very likely to have stable land-cover/use conditions for several decades to come. At each site a suite of meteorological parameters are monitored, including triple redundancy for the primary air temperature and precipitation variables and for soil moisture/temperature. Instrumentation is regularly calibrated to National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) standards and maintained by a staff of expert engineers. This attention to detail in USCRN is intended to ensure the creation of an unimpeachable record of changes in surface climate over the United States for decades to come. Data are made available without restric...


Journal of Climate | 2015

Extended Reconstructed Sea Surface Temperature Version 4 (ERSST.v4): Part II. Parametric and Structural Uncertainty Estimations

Wei Liu; Boyin Huang; Peter W. Thorne; Viva F. Banzon; Huai-Min Zhang; Eric Freeman; Jay H. Lawrimore; Thomas C. Peterson; Thomas M. Smith; Scott D. Woodruff

Described herein is the parametric and structural uncertainty quantification for the monthly Extended Reconstructed Sea Surface Temperature (ERSST) version 4 (v4). A Monte Carlo ensemble approach was adoptedtocharacterizeparametricuncertainty,becauseinitialexperimentsindicatetheexistenceofsignificant nonlinear interactions. Globally, the resulting ensemble exhibits a wider uncertainty range before 1900, as well as an uncertainty maximum around World War II. Changes at smaller spatial scales in many regions, or for important features such as Nino-3.4 variability, are found to be dominated by particular parameter choices. Substantial differences in parametric uncertainty estimates are found between ERSST.v4 and the independently derived Hadley Centre SST version 3 (HadSST3) product. The largest uncertainties are over the mid and high latitudes in ERSST.v4but in the tropics in HadSST3. Overall, in comparison with HadSST3, ERSST.v4 has larger parametric uncertainties at smaller spatial and shorter time scales and smaller parametric uncertainties at longer time scales, which likely reflects the different sources of uncertainty quantified in the respective parametric analyses. ERSST.v4 exhibits a stronger globally averaged warming trend than HadSST3duringtheperiodof1910‐2012,butwithasmallerparametricuncertainty.Theseglobal-meantrend estimates and their uncertainties marginally overlap. Several additional SST datasetsare usedto infer the structuraluncertainty inherent in SST estimates. For the global mean, the structural uncertainty, estimated as the spread between available SST products, is more often than not larger than the parametric uncertainty in ERSST.v4. Neither parametric nor structural uncertainties call into question that on the global-mean level and centennial time scale, SSTs have warmed notably.


Geophysical Research Letters | 1999

Global rural temperature trends

Thomas C. Peterson; Kevin P. Gallo; Jay H. Lawrimore; Timothy W. Owen; Alex Huang; David A. McKittrick

Using rural/urban land surface classifications derived from maps and satellite observed nighttime surface lights, global mean land surface air temperature time series were created using data from all weather observing stations in a global temperature data base and from rural stations only. The global rural temperature time series and trends are very similar to those derived from the full data set. Therefore, the well-known global temperature time series from in situ stations is not significantly impacted by urban warming.


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2013

U.S. Climate Reference Network Soil Moisture and Temperature Observations

Jesse E. Bell; Michael A. Palecki; C. Bruce Baker; William G. Collins; Jay H. Lawrimore; Ronald D. Leeper; Mark E. Hall; John Kochendorfer; Tilden P. Meyers; Tim Wilson; Howard J. Diamond

AbstractThe U.S. Climate Reference Network (USCRN) is a network of climate-monitoring stations maintained and operated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to provide climate-science-quality measurements of air temperature and precipitation. The stations in the network were designed to be extensible to other missions, and the National Integrated Drought Information System program determined that the USCRN could be augmented to provide observations that are more drought relevant. To increase the network’s capability of monitoring soil processes and drought, soil observations were added to USCRN instrumentation. In 2011, the USCRN team completed at each USCRN station in the conterminous United States the installation of triplicate-configuration soil moisture and soil temperature probes at five standards depths (5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 cm) as prescribed by the World Meteorological Organization; in addition, the project included the installation of a relative humidity sensor at each of...

Collaboration


Dive into the Jay H. Lawrimore's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas C. Peterson

World Meteorological Organization

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matthew J. Menne

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Richard R. Heim

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Boyin Huang

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas R. Karl

United States Department of Commerce

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Huai-Min Zhang

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Viva F. Banzon

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Claude N. Williams

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge