Dark clouds roil the sky above Pasadena, California, during an atmospheric river event. A series of nine such storms delivered record amounts of rain and snow to the state and caused multiple deaths between late 2022 and January 2023. Additional atmospheric rivers have inundated California since. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Like hurricane categories, a scale
for atmospheric river storm severity could help communities around the globe
compare and prepare.
Atmospheric rivers – vast airborne
corridors of water vapor flowing from Earth’s tropics toward higher latitudes –
can steer much-needed rain to parched lands. But in extreme form, they can also
cause destruction and loss of life, as recently occurred in parts of
California. Their effects, both hazardous and beneficial, are felt globally.
A new study using NASA data shows that a recently developed
rating system can provide a consistent global benchmark for tracking these
“rivers in the sky.” Research into atmospheric rivers has largely focused on
the west coasts of North America and Europe. The new findings help expand our
understanding of how these storms arise, evolve, and impact communities all
over the world. In addition, the ratings could help meteorologists better warn
people to plan for them.
The findings also revealed an
increasing number of atmospheric river events around the world and across all
ranks, with peak activity in mid-latitude oceans (temperate belts roughly
between 30 and 60 degrees north and south).
To help forecast the potential
strength and impacts of the storms as they make landfall on the West Coast of
North America, meteorologists from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at
the University of California, San Diego, along with the National Weather
Service, introduced an atmospheric river (AR)
scale in 2019.
By ranking them from 1 to 5, or weakest to strongest, the scientists sought to
differentiate between primarily beneficial storms versus primarily hazardous
ones. By one estimate, insured losses due to flood damages increase by a factor
of 10 with every step up in rank, with AR 5 events linked to a median damage
amount of $260 million in the Western U.S.
NASA’s Atmospheric Infrared Sounder
(AIRS) aboard the Aqua satellite captured a series of atmospheric rivers that
impacted much of Western North America in early 2023, as seen in this animation
showing cloud temperatures. Cooler clouds – shown in blue and purple – are associated
with very heavy rainfall. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Shaping the Water Cycle
Although the term “atmospheric
river” was only coined in 1994, the storms’ impacts were felt well before then.
Scientists have estimated some 300 million people worldwide are at risk for
flooding due to atmospheric rivers which, on average, transport quantities of
water vapor more than double the flow of the Amazon River. A growing body of
research is exploring how these storms play a critical role in shaping the
global water cycle from the Andes to the Arctic, where moisture from
atmospheric rivers has recently been found to melt and slow the seasonal recovery of sea
ice.
In the new study, scientists built
a database of global atmospheric river events from 1980 to 2020, using a
computer algorithm to automatically identify tens of thousands of the
events in the Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications,
version 2 (MERRA-2), a NASA re-analysis of historical
atmospheric observations. To rank the events, the study authors then applied
the atmospheric river scale, which is based on a storm’s expected duration and
maximum rate of water vapor transport.
Across the 40 years studied,
higher-ranked storms lasted longer and traveled farther than lower-ranked
storms. Mean travel distance was found to be about 400 miles (650 kilometers)
with AR 1 and about 2,900 miles (4,700 kilometers) with AR 5, while mean
lifetime was about 17 hours for AR 1 and 110 hours for AR 5. Higher-ranked
storms (AR 4 and AR 5) were less common and tended to begin their life cycle
closer to the tropics while ending in colder, higher-latitude regions.
Additionally, the scientists
detected an increase in atmospheric river frequency during strong El Niño
years.
An atmospheric river system that
traveled across the Pacific Ocean in 2017 is captured here in satellite imagery
by NASA’s AIRS instrument. Scientists are working to understand how these
powerful storms impact regions of the world beyond western North America and
Europe. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Diagnosing a Storm
“The current study helps to
highlight the global reach of atmospheric rivers, as well as their possible
origins, including in less-explored regions where the environmental conditions
and societal impacts could be different from where we currently live [in the
United States],” said lead author Bin Guan, a scientist at the Joint Institute
for Regional Earth System Science and Engineering (JIFRESSE). The institute is a collaboration between University
of California, Los Angeles and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern
California.
A uniform scale can be useful for
diagnosing atmospheric rivers in an era of instant communications, the
scientists said. A key advantage is that the ratings minimize possible
confusion when comparing the same meteorological phenomenon across languages
and cultures. They noted this has not been the case for some more familiar
weather events, such as tropical cyclones, which have been categorized using
different thresholds in different regions.
Guan and colleagues said that taking the next step and translating the scale into region-specific impacts will require more research that takes into consideration local characteristics. They noted that many factors, from geography to socioeconomics, can influence how a storm is perceived by those who weather it.
Jane J. Lee / Andrew Wang
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Written by Sally Younger
Source: Ranking Atmospheric Rivers: New Study Finds World of Potential | NASA
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