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Featured researches published by Jinming Feng.


Journal of Climate | 2012

Simulating the Regional Impacts of Urbanization and Anthropogenic Heat Release on Climate across China

Jinming Feng; Yongli Wang; Zhuguo Ma; Yonghe Liu

AbstractTogether with economic development and accelerated urbanization, the urban population in China has been increasing rapidly, and anthropogenic heat released by large-scale energy consumption in cities is expected to be a vital factor affecting the climate. In this paper, the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model coupled with the Urban Canopy Model (UCM) is employed to simulate the regional impacts on climate under the two scenarios: the underlying surface changes due to urbanization (USCU) and anthropogenic heat release (AHR). Three experiments were performed from December 2006 to December 2008. With respect to the USCU, the surface albedo and the available surface soil water decrease markedly. With the inclusion of AHR, the two scenarios give rise to increased surface temperatures over most areas of China. Especially in the urban agglomeration area of the Yangtze River delta, the combination of USCU and AHR could result in an increase of 2°C in the surface air temperature. The influence of ...


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Developed and developing world responsibilities for historical climate change and CO2 mitigation

Ting Wei; Shili Yang; John C. Moore; Peijun Shi; Xuefeng Cui; Qingyun Duan; Bing Xu; Yongjiu Dai; Wenping Yuan; Xin Wei; Zhipeng Yang; Tijian Wen; Fei Teng; Yun Gao; Jieming Chou; Xiaodong Yan; Zhigang Wei; Yan Guo; Yundi Jiang; Xuejie Gao; Kaicun Wang; Xiaogu Zheng; Fumin Ren; Shihua Lv; Yongqiang Yu; Bin Liu; Yong Luo; Weijing Li; Duoying Ji; Jinming Feng

At the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference in Cancun, in November 2010, the Heads of State reached an agreement on the aim of limiting the global temperature rise to 2 °C relative to preindustrial levels. They recognized that long-term future warming is primarily constrained by cumulative anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, that deep cuts in global emissions are required, and that action based on equity must be taken to meet this objective. However, negotiations on emission reduction among countries are increasingly fraught with difficulty, partly because of arguments about the responsibility for the ongoing temperature rise. Simulations with two earth-system models (NCAR/CESM and BNU-ESM) demonstrate that developed countries had contributed about 60–80%, developing countries about 20–40%, to the global temperature rise, upper ocean warming, and sea-ice reduction by 2005. Enacting pledges made at Cancun with continuation to 2100 leads to a reduction in global temperature rise relative to business as usual with a 1/3–2/3 (CESM 33–67%, BNU-ESM 35–65%) contribution from developed and developing countries, respectively. To prevent a temperature rise by 2 °C or more in 2100, it is necessary to fill the gap with more ambitious mitigation efforts.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

Nested high-resolution modeling of the impact of urbanization on regional climate in three vast urban agglomerations in China

Jun Wang; Jinming Feng; Zhongwei Yan; Yonghong Hu; Gensuo Jia

[1] In this paper, the Weather Research and Forecasting Model, coupled to the Urban Canopy Model, is employed to simulate the impact of urbanization on the regional climate over three vast city agglomerations in China. Based on high-resolution land use and land cover data, two scenarios are designed to represent the nonurban and current urban land use distributions. By comparing the results of two nested, high-resolution numerical experiments, the spatial and temporal changes on surface air temperature, heat stress index, surface energy budget, and precipitation due to urbanization are analyzed and quantified. Urban expansion increases the surface air temperature in urban areas by about 1C, and this climatic forcing of urbanization on temperature is more pronounced in summer and nighttime than other seasons and daytime. The heat stress intensity, which reflects the combined effects of temperature and humidity, is enhanced by about 0.5 units in urban areas. The regional incoming solar radiation increases after urban expansion, which may be caused by the reduction of cloud fraction. The increased temperature and roughness of the urban surface lead to enhanced convergence. Meanwhile, the planetary boundary layer is deepened, and water vapor is mixed more evenly in the lower atmosphere. The deficit of water vapor leads to less convective available potential energy and more convective inhibition energy. Finally, these combined effects may reduce the rainfall amount over urban areas, mainly in summer, and change the regional precipitation pattern to a certain extent.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Multiyear precipitation reduction strongly decreases carbon uptake over northern China

Wenping Yuan; Dan Liu; Wenjie Dong; Shuguang Liu; Guangsheng Zhou; Guirui Yu; Tianbao Zhao; Jinming Feng; Zhuguo Ma; Jiquan Chen; Yang Chen; Shiping Chen; Shijie Han; Jianping Huang; Linghao Li; Huizhi Liu; Shaoming Liu; Mingguo Ma; Yanfeng Wang; Jiangzhou Xia; Wenfang Xu; Qiang Zhang; Xinquang Zhao; Liang Zhao

Drought has been a concern in global and regional water, carbon, and energy cycles. From 1999 to 2011, northern China experienced a multiyear precipitation reduction that significantly decreased water availability as indicated by the Palmer Drought Severity Index and soil moisture measurements. In this study, a light use efficiency model (EC-LUE) and an ecosystem physiological model (IBIS) were used to characterize the impacts of long-term drought on terrestrial carbon fluxes in northern China. EC-LUE and IBIS models showed the reduction of averaged GPP of 0.09 and 0.05 Pg C yr-1 during 1999-2011 compared with 1982-1998. Based on the IBIS model, simulated ecosystem respiration experienced an insignificant decrease from 1999 to 2011. The multiyear precipitation reduction changed the regional carbon uptake of 0.011 Pg C yr-1 from 1982 to 1998 to a net source of 0.018 Pg C yr-1 from 1999 to 2011. Moreover, a pronounced decrease in maize yield in almost all provinces in the study region was found from 1999 to 2011 versus the average of yield from1978 to 2011. The largest maize yield reduction occurred in Beijing (2499kgha-1yr-1), Jilin (2180kgha-1yr-1), Tianjing (1923kgha-1yr-1), and Heilongjiang (1791kgha-1yr-1), and the maize yield anomaly was significantly correlated with the annual precipitation over the entire study area. Our results revealed that recent climate change, especially drought-induced water stress, is the dominant cause of the reduction in the terrestrial carbon sink over northern China.


Journal of remote sensing | 2013

Validation of MODIS-GPP product at 10 flux sites in northern China

Xufeng Wang; Mingguo Ma; Xin Li; Yi Song; Junlei Tan; Guanghui Huang; Zhihui Zhang; Tianbao Zhao; Jinming Feng; Zhuguo Ma; Wei Wei; Yanfen Bai

Gross primary production (GPP) is an important variable in studies of the carbon cycle and climate change. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)-GPP product (MOD17) provides global GPP data for terrestrial ecosystems; however, it is not well validated in China. In this study, an eddy covariance (EC) system observed GPP at 10 sites in northern China and was used to validate MOD17. The results indicated that MOD17 presents a strong bias in the study region due to the meteorological data, MODIS FPAR (fraction of absorbed photosynthetically active radiation) (MOD15), and the model parameters in the MODIS-GPP algorithm, Biome Parameters Look Up Table (BPLUT). Maximum light-use efficiency (ϵ0) had the strongest impact on the predicted GPP of the MODIS-GPP algorithm. After using the inputs observed in situ and improving parameters in the MODIS-GPP algorithm, the model could explain 85% of the EC-observed GPP of the sites, whereas the MODIS-GPP algorithm without in situ inputs and parameters only explained 26% of EC-observed GPP.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Dynamical downscaling simulation and future projection of precipitation over China

Jiawei Bao; Jinming Feng; Yongli Wang

This study assesses present-day and future precipitation changes over China by using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model version 3.5.1. The WRF model was driven by the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Earth System Model with the Generalized Ocean Layer Dynamics component (GFDL-ESM2G) output over China at the resolution of 30 km for the present day (1976–2005) and near future (2031–2050) under the Representative Concentration Pathways 4.5 (RCP4.5) scenario. The results demonstrate that with improved resolution and better representation of finer-scale physical process, dynamical downscaling adds value to the regional precipitation simulation. WRF downscaling generally simulates more reliable spatial distributions of total precipitation and extreme precipitation in China with higher spatial pattern correlations and closer magnitude. It is able to successfully eliminate the artificial precipitation maximum area simulated by GFDL-ESM2G over the west of the Sichuan Basin, along the eastern edge of the Tibetan Plateau in both summer and winter. Besides, the regional annual cycle and frequencies of precipitation intensity are also well depicted by WRF. In the future projections, under the RCP4.5 scenario, both models project that summer precipitation over most parts of China will increase, especially in western and northern China, and that precipitation over some southern regions is projected to decrease. The projected increase of future extreme precipitation makes great contributions to the total precipitation increase. In southern regions, the projected larger extreme precipitation amounts accompanied with fewer extreme precipitation frequencies suggest that future daily extreme precipitation intensity is likely to increase in these regions.


Advances in Atmospheric Sciences | 2014

Impact of Anthropogenic Heat Release on Regional Climate in Three Vast Urban Agglomerations in China

Jinming Feng; Jun Wang; Zhongwei Yan

We simulated the impact of anthropogenic heat release (AHR) on the regional climate in three vast city agglomerations in China using the Weather Research and Forecasting model with nested high-resolution modeling. Based on energy consumption and high-quality land use data, we designed two scenarios to represent no-AHR and current-AHR conditions. By comparing the results of the two numerical experiments, changes of surface air temperature and precipitation due to AHR were quantified and analyzed. We concluded that AHR increases the temperature in these urbanized areas by about 0.5°C—1°C, and this increase is more pronounced in winter than in other seasons. The inclusion of AHR enhances the convergence of water vapor over urbanized areas. Together with the warming of the lower troposphere and the enhancement of ascending motions caused by AHR, the average convective available potential energy in urbanized areas is increased. Rainfall amounts in summer over urbanized areas are likely to increase and regional precipitation patterns to be altered to some extent.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Potential sensitivity of warm season precipitation to urbanization extents: Modeling study in Beijing‐Tianjin‐Hebei urban agglomeration in China

Jun Wang; Jinming Feng; Zhongwei Yan

In this study, we investigated how different degrees of urbanization affect local and regional rainfall using high-resolution simulations based on the Weather Research and Forecasting Model. The extreme rainfall event of 21 July 2012 in Beijing was simulated for three representative urban land use distributions (no urbanization, early urbanization level of 1980, and recent urbanization level of 2009). Results suggest that urban modification of rainfall is potentially sensitive to urban land use condition. Rainfall was increased significantly over the downwind Beijing metropolis because of the effects of early urbanization; however, recent conditions of high urban development caused no significant increase. Further comparative analysis revealed that positive urban thermodynamical effects (i.e., urban warming, increased sensible heat transportation, and enhanced convergence and vertical motions) play major roles in urban modification of rainfall during the early urbanization stage. However, after cities expand to a certain extent (i.e., urban agglomeration), the regional moisture depression induced by the prevalence of impervious urban land has an effect on atmospheric instability energy, which might negate the citys positive impact on regional rainfall. Additional results from regional climate simulations for 10 Julys confirm this supposition. Given the explosive urban population growth and increasing demand for freshwater in cities, the potential negative effects of the urban environment on precipitation are worth investigation, particularly in rapidly developing countries and regions.


Advances in Atmospheric Sciences | 2014

CMIP5/AMIP GCM simulations of East Asian summer monsoon

Jinming Feng; Ting Wei; Wenjie Dong; Qizhong Wu; Yongli Wang

The East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) is a distinctive component of the Asian climate system and critically influences the economy and society of the region. To understand the ability of AGCMs in capturing the major features of EASM, 10 models that participated in Coupled Model Intercomparison Project/Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5/AMIP), which used observational SST and sea ice to drive AGCMs during the period 1979–2008, were evaluated by comparing with observations and AMIP II simulations. The results indicated that the multi-model ensemble (MME) of CMIP5/AMIP captures the main characteristics of precipitation and monsoon circulation, and shows the best skill in EASM simulation, better than the AMIP II MME. As for the Meiyu/Changma/Baiyu rainbelt, the intensity of rainfall is underestimated in all the models. The biases are caused by a weak western Pacific subtropical high (WPSH) and accompanying eastward southwesterly winds in group I models, and by a too strong and west-extended WPSH as well as westerly winds in group II models. Considerable systematic errors exist in the simulated seasonal migration of rainfall, and the notable northward jumps and rainfall persistence remain a challenge for all the models. However, the CMIP5/AMIP MME is skillful in simulating the western North Pacific monsoon index (WNPMI).


Advances in Atmospheric Sciences | 2014

Analyses of extreme climate events over china based on CMIP5 historical and future simulations

Shili Yang; Jinming Feng; Wenjie Dong; Jieming Chou

Based on observations and 12 simulations from Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP5) models, climatic extremes and their changes over China in the past and under the future scenarios of three Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) are analyzed. In observations, frost days (FD) and low-temperature threshold days (TN10P) show a decreasing trend, and summer days (SU), high-temperature threshold days (TX90P), heavy precipitation days (R20), and the contribution of heavy precipitation days (P95T) show an increasing trend. Most models are able to simulate the main characteristics of most extreme indices. In particular, the mean FD and TX90P are reproduced the best, and the basic trends of FD, TN10P, SU and TX90P are represented. For the FD and SU indexes, most models show good ability in capturing the spatial differences between the mean state of the periods 1986–2005 and 1961–80; however, for other indices, the simulation abilities for spatial disparity are less satisfactory and need to be improved. Under the high emissions scenario of RCP8.5, the century-scale linear changes of the multi-model ensemble (MME) for FD, SU, TN10P, TX90P, R20 and P95T are −46.9, 46.0, −27.1, 175.4, and 2.9 days, and 9.9%, respectively; and the spatial change scope for each index is consistent with the emissions intensity. Due to the complexities of physical process parameterizations and the limitation of forcing data, great uncertainty still exists with respect to the simulation of climatic extremes.

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Jun Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zhongwei Yan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zhuguo Ma

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wenjie Dong

Beijing Normal University

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Wenping Yuan

Beijing Normal University

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Tianbao Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yongli Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jiangzhou Xia

Beijing Normal University

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Qizhong Wu

Beijing Normal University

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