Session 7 | |||
Climate and Extreme Weather Events I | |||
Chairs: Kelly Redmond, Western Regional Climate Center, Reno, NV; Edward O'Lenic (Chair after the Break), NOAA/NWS/CPC, Camp Springs, MD | |||
1:30 PM | 7.1 | Tropical cyclones, drought, and the seasonal reversal of the ENSO rainfall signal in the Philippines Bradfield Lyon, International Research Institute for Climate and Society, Columbia Univ., Palisades, NY; and S. J. Camargo, H. Cristi, E. R. Verceles, F. D. Hilario, and R. Abastillas | |
1:45 PM | 7.2 | Statistical analysis of factors affecting the genesis of tropical Atlantic cyclones in climate model simulations R. Saravanan, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX; and S. Mahajan | |
2:00 PM | 7.3 | A Multi-Millennial Record of Intense Hurricanes in New England Philip Lane, MIT, Woods Hole, MA; and J. Donnelly | |
2:15 PM | 7.4 | U.S. temperature and precipitation extreme events, 1850–2005 Michael A. Palecki, ISWS, Champaign, IL; and K. E. Kunkel and J. R. Angel | |
2:30 PM | 7.5 | Closed anticyclones of subtropical and middle latitudes: A 54-year climatology (1950–2003) and three case studies of extreme heat waves Thomas J. Galarneau Jr., SUNY, Albany, NY; and L. Bosart | |
2:45 PM | 7.6 | The Influence of Low Frequency and Synoptic Variability on the Timing, Magnitude, and Geographical Distribution of Extreme Wind Events Jeffrey H. Yin, NCAR, Boulder, CO; and G. Branstator | |
3:00 PM | Coffee Break in Exhibit Hall and Raffle | ||
3:30 PM | 7.7 | The behavior of extreme cold-air outbreaks in a greenhouse-warmed world Stephen J. Vavrus, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; and J. E. Walsh, D. Portis, and W. L. Chapman | |
3:45 PM | 7.8 | Changes in North American extremes derived from daily weather data Thomas C. Peterson, NOAA/NESDIS/NCDC, Asheville, NC; and X. Zhang, M. B. India, and J. L. V. Aguirre | |
4:00 PM | 7.9 | A Monte Carlo assessment of uncertainties in heavy precipitation frequency variations Kenneth E. Kunkel, ISWS, Champaign, Illinois; and T. R. Karl and D. R. Easterling | |
4:15 PM | 7.10 | Statistical significance of the trends in the extremes of monthly precipitation over the US Salil Mahajan, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX; and R. Saravanan, G. North, and M. G. Genton | |
4:30 PM | 7.11 | High quality daily temperature and precipitation historical data sets for the Northeast United States: implications for sudies of climate extremes Paula J. Brown, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA; and R. S. Bradley | |
4:45 PM | 7.12 | A diagnostic study of atmospheric blocking using Lyapunov exponents over a 50 year period Athar Hussain, Univ. of Missouri, Columbia, MO; and A. R. Lupo, C. Strong, and S. Dostoglou | |
5:00 PM | 7.13 | An adaptive multi-regressive method for summer seasonal forecast in the Mediterranean area Massimiliano Pasqui, Institute of Biometeorology, National Research Council, Firenze, FI, Italy; and L. Genesio, A. Crisci, J. Primicerio, R. Benedetti, and G. Maracchi | |
5:15 PM | 7.14 | The development of standardized anomalies for gradient fields as well as other fields—a preliminary investigation Ivory J. Small, NOAA/NWS, San Diego, CA |
Thursday, 18 January 2007: 1:30 PM-5:30 PM, 214B
* - Indicates paper has been withdrawn from meeting