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Featured researches published by Nadav Peleg.


Earth’s Future | 2016

Uncertainty partition challenges the predictability of vital details of climate change

Simone Fatichi; Valeriy Y. Ivanov; Athanasios Paschalis; Nadav Peleg; Peter Molnar; Stefan Rimkus; Jongho Kim; Paolo Burlando; Enrica Caporali

Decision makers and consultants are particularly interested in “detailed” information on future climate to prepare adaptation strategies and adjust design criteria. Projections of future climate at local spatial scales and fine temporal resolutions are subject to the same uncertainties as those at the global scale but the partition among uncertainty sources (emission scenarios, climate models, and internal climate variability) remains largely unquantified. At the local scale the uncertainty of the mean and extremes of precipitation is shown to be irreducible for mid and end-of-century projections because it is almost entirely due to internal climate variability (stochasticity). Conversely, projected changes in mean air temperature and other meteorological variables can be largely constrained, even at local scales, if more accurate emission scenarios can be developed. The results were obtained by applying a comprehensive stochastic downscaling technique to climate model outputs for three exemplary locations. In contrast with earlier studies, the three sources of uncertainty are considered as dependent and, therefore, non-additive. The evidence of the predominant role of internal climate variability leaves little room for uncertainty reduction in precipitation projections; however, the inference is not necessarily negative, since the uncertainty of historic observations is almost as large as that for future projections with direct implications for climate change adaptation measures.


Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems | 2017

An advanced stochastic weather generator for simulating 2‐D high‐resolution climate variables

Nadav Peleg; Simone Fatichi; Athanasios Paschalis; Peter Molnar; Paolo Burlando

A new stochastic weather generator, Advanced WEather GENerator for a two-dimensional grid (AWE-GEN-2d) is presented. The model combines physical and stochastic approaches to simulate key meteorological variables at high spatial and temporal resolution: 2 km × 2 km and 5 min for precipitation and cloud cover and 100 m × 100 m and 1 h for near-surface air temperature, solar radiation, vapor pressure, atmospheric pressure, and near-surface wind. The model requires spatially distributed data for the calibration process, which can nowadays be obtained by remote sensing devices (weather radar and satellites), reanalysis data sets and ground stations. AWE-GEN-2d is parsimonious in terms of computational demand and therefore is particularly suitable for studies where exploring internal climatic variability at multiple spatial and temporal scales is fundamental. Applications of the model include models of environmental systems, such as hydrological and geomorphological models, where high-resolution spatial and temporal meteorological forcing is crucial. The weather generator was calibrated and validated for the Engelberg region, an area with complex topography in the Swiss Alps. Model test shows that the climate variables are generated by AWE-GEN-2d with a level of accuracy that is sufficient for many practical applications.


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2018

Intensification of Convective Rain Cells at Warmer Temperatures Observed from High-Resolution Weather Radar Data

Nadav Peleg; Francesco Marra; Simone Fatichi; Peter Molnar; Efrat Morin; Ashish Sharma; Paolo Burlando

AbstractThis study contributes to the understanding of the relationship between air temperature and convection by analyzing the characteristics of rainfall at the storm and convective rain cell scales. High spatial–temporal resolution (1 km, 5 min) estimates from a uniquely long weather radar record (24 years) were coupled with near-surface air temperature over Mediterranean and semiarid regions in the eastern Mediterranean. In the examined temperature range (5°–25°C), the peak intensity of individual convective rain cells was found to increase with temperature, but at a lower rate than the 7%°C−1 scaling expected from the Clausius–Clapeyron relation, while the area of the individual convective rain cells slightly decreases or, at most, remains unchanged. At the storm scale, the areal convective rainfall was found to increase with warmer temperatures, whereas the areal nonconvective rainfall and the stormwide area decrease. This suggests an enhanced moisture convergence from the stormwide extent toward th...


Journal of Hydrology | 2018

Spatial variability of extreme rainfall at radar subpixel scale

Nadav Peleg; Francesco Marra; Simone Fatichi; Athanasios Paschalis; Peter Molnar; Paolo Burlando


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences | 2017

Partitioning the impacts of spatial and climatological rainfall variability in urban drainage modeling

Nadav Peleg; Frank Blumensaat; Peter Molnar; Simone Fatichi; Paolo Burlando


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences | 2017

Intensity–duration–frequency curves from remote sensing rainfall estimates: comparing satellite and weather radar over the eastern Mediterranean

Francesco Marra; Efrat Morin; Nadav Peleg; Yiwen Mei; Emmanouil N. Anagnostou


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences | 2017

Convective rainfall in a dry climate: Relations with synoptic systems and flash-flood generation in the Dead Sea region

Idit Belachsen; Francesco Marra; Nadav Peleg; Efrat Morin


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions | 2016

Comparing Intensity–Duration–Frequency curves derived from CMORPH and radar rainfall estimates over the Eastern Mediterranean

Francesco Marra; Efrat Morin; Nadav Peleg; Yiwen Mei; Emmanouil N. Anagnostou


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions | 2016

Partitioning spatial and temporal rainfall variability in urban drainage modelling

Nadav Peleg; Frank Blumensaat; Peter Molnar; Simone Fatichi; Paolo Burlando


Earth’s Future | 2016

Uncertainty partition challenges the predictability of vital details of climate change: VITAL DETAILS OF CLIMATE CHANGE

Simone Fatichi; Valeriy Y. Ivanov; Athanasios Paschalis; Nadav Peleg; Peter Molnar; Stefan Rimkus; Jongho Kim; Paolo Burlando; Enrica Caporali

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Francesco Marra

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Efrat Morin

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Frank Blumensaat

Dresden University of Technology

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Jongho Kim

University of Michigan

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