Kira Rehfeld
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kira Rehfeld.
Climate Dynamics | 2013
Kira Rehfeld; Norbert Marwan; Sebastian F.M. Breitenbach; Jürgen Kurths
Internal variability of the Asian monsoon system and the relationship amongst its sub-systems, the Indian and East Asian Summer Monsoon, are not sufficiently understood to predict its responses to a future warming climate. Past environmental variability is recorded in Palaeoclimate proxy data. In the Asian monsoon domain many records are available, e.g. from stalagmites, tree-rings or sediment cores. They have to be interpreted in the context of each other, but visual comparison is insufficient. Heterogeneous growth rates lead to uneven temporal sampling. Therefore, computing correlation values is difficult because standard methods require co-eval observation times, and sampling-dependent bias effects may occur. Climate networks are tools to extract system dynamics from observed time series, and to investigate Earth system dynamics in a spatio-temporal context. We establish paleoclimate networks to compare paleoclimate records within a spatially extended domain. Our approach is based on adapted linear and nonlinear association measures that are more efficient than interpolation-based measures in the presence of inter-sampling time variability. Based on this new method we investigate Asian Summer Monsoon dynamics for the late Holocene, focusing on the Medieval Warm Period (MWP), the Little Ice Age (LIA), and the recent period of warming in East Asia. We find a strong Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM) influence on the East Asian Summer Monsoon during the MWP. During the cold LIA, the ISM circulation was weaker and did not extend as far east. The most recent period of warming yields network results that could indicate a currently ongoing transition phase towards a stronger ISM penetration into China. We find that we could not have come to these conclusions using visual comparison of the data and conclude that paleoclimate networks have great potential to study the variability of climate subsystems in space and time.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Nora Molkenthin; Kira Rehfeld; Norbert Marwan; J. Kurths
Complex network approaches have recently been applied to continuous spatial dynamical systems, like climate, successfully uncovering the systems interaction structure. However the relationship between the underlying atmospheric or oceanic flows dynamics and the estimated network measures have remained largely unclear. We bridge this crucial gap in a bottom-up approach and define a continuous analytical analogue of Pearson correlation networks for advection-diffusion dynamics on a background flow. Analysing complex networks of prototypical flows and from time series data of the equatorial Pacific, we find that our analytical model reproduces the most salient features of these networks and thus provides a general foundation of climate networks. The relationships we obtain between velocity field and network measures show that line-like structures of high betweenness mark transition zones in the flow rather than, as previously thought, the propagation of dynamical information.
Paleoceanography | 2017
Stefan Mulitza; Cristiano Mazur Chiessi; Enno Schefuß; Jörg Lippold; David Wichmann; Benny Antz; Andreas Mackensen; André Paul; Matthias Prange; Kira Rehfeld; Martin Werner; Torsten Bickert; Norbert Frank; Henning Kuhnert; Jean Lynch-Stieglitz; Rodrigo Costa Portilho-Ramos; André O Sawakuchi; Michael Schulz; Tilmann Schwenk; Ralf Tiedemann; Maximilian Vahlenkamp; Yancheng Zhang
Changes in heat transport associated with fluctuations in the strength of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) are widely considered to affect the position of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), but the temporal immediacy of this teleconnection has to date not been resolved. Based on a high resolution marine sediment sequence over the last deglaciation, we provide evidence for a synchronous and near-linear link between changes in the Atlantic interhemispheric sea surface temperature difference and continental precipitation over northeast Brazil. The tight coupling between AMOC strength, sea surface temperature difference and precipitation changes over northeast Brazil unambiguously points to a rapid and proportional adjustment of the ITCZ location to past changes in the Atlantic meridional heat transport.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Franziska A. Lechleitner; Sebastian F.M. Breitenbach; Kira Rehfeld; Harriet E. Ridley; Yemane Asmerom; Keith M. Prufer; Norbert Marwan; Bedartha Goswami; Douglas J. Kennett; Valorie V. Aquino; Victor J. Polyak; Gerald H. Haug; Timothy I. Eglinton; James U.L. Baldini
The presence of a low- to mid-latitude interhemispheric hydrologic seesaw is apparent over orbital and glacial-interglacial timescales, but its existence over the most recent past remains unclear. Here we investigate, based on climate proxy reconstructions from both hemispheres, the inter-hemispherical phasing of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) and the low- to mid-latitude teleconnections in the Northern Hemisphere over the past 2000 years. A clear feature is a persistent southward shift of the ITCZ during the Little Ice Age until the beginning of the 19th Century. Strong covariation between our new composite ITCZ-stack and North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) records reveals a tight coupling between these two synoptic weather and climate phenomena over decadal-to-centennial timescales. This relationship becomes most apparent when comparing two precisely dated, high-resolution paleorainfall records from Belize and Scotland, indicating that the low- to mid-latitude teleconnection was also active over annual-decadal timescales. It is likely a combination of external forcing, i.e., solar and volcanic, and internal feedbacks, that drives the synchronous ITCZ and NAO shifts via energy flux perturbations in the tropics.
Nature | 2018
Kira Rehfeld; Thomas Münch; Sze Ling Ho; Thomas Laepple
Changes in climate variability are as important for society to address as are changes in mean climate. Contrasting temperature variability during the Last Glacial Maximum and the Holocene can provide insights into the relationship between the mean state of the climate and its variability. However, although glacial–interglacial changes in variability have been quantified for Greenland, a global view remains elusive. Here we use a network of marine and terrestrial temperature proxies to show that temperature variability decreased globally by a factor of four as the climate warmed by 3–8 degrees Celsius from the Last Glacial Maximum (around 21,000 years ago) to the Holocene epoch (the past 11,500 years). This decrease had a clear zonal pattern, with little change in the tropics (by a factor of only 1.6–2.8) and greater change in the mid-latitudes of both hemispheres (by a factor of 3.3–14). By contrast, Greenland ice-core records show a reduction in temperature variability by a factor of 73, suggesting influences beyond local temperature or a decoupling of atmospheric and global surface temperature variability for Greenland. The overall pattern of reduced variability can be explained by changes in the meridional temperature gradient, a mechanism that points to further decreases in temperature variability in a warmer future.
Nature | 2018
Kira Rehfeld; Thomas Münch; Sze Ling Ho; Thomas Laepple
This corrects the article DOI: 10.1038/nature25454
International Journal of Biomedical Engineering and Technology | 2012
Yulia Lyatskaya; Kira Rehfeld; D Kadam; Hale B. Caglar; Aaron M. Allen; Lee M. Chin; Joseph H. Killoran
Two techniques for target motion characterisation based on 4DCT images were evaluated: calculation of the conformality index and a technique based on image subtraction. The outputs for both techniques were shown to correlate with target displacement, indicating the applicability of these techniques for motion characterisation. While conformality index calculation requires target delineation (a time-consuming and subjective process), image subtraction is automatic and objective. In addition, the image subtraction method produces a visual representation of the areas where motion is present between different phases. The procedure has potential for automatic internal target volume definition for radiotherapy treatment purposes.
Turn down the heat: climate extremes, regional impacts, and the case for resilience. | 2013
Hans Joachim Schellnhuber; B. Hare; Olivia Serdeczny; Michiel Schaeffer; Sophie Adams; Florent Baarsch; Susanne Schwan; Dim Coumou; Alexander Robinson; M. Vieweg; F. Piontek; Reik V. Donner; Jakob Runge; Kira Rehfeld; Joeri Rogelj; Mahé Perette; Arathy Menon; Carl-Friedrich Schleussner; Alberte Bondeau; Jacob Schewe; Katja Frieler; L. Warszawski; Marcia Rocha
Nonlinear Processes in Geophysics | 2011
Kira Rehfeld; Norbert Marwan; Jobst Heitzig; Jürgen Kurths
Climate of The Past | 2012
Sebastian F.M. Breitenbach; Kira Rehfeld; Bedartha Goswami; James U.L. Baldini; Harriet E. Ridley; Douglas J. Kennett; Keith M. Prufer; Valorie V. Aquino; Yemane Asmerom; Victor J. Polyak; Hai Cheng; J. Kurths; Norbert Marwan