Monsoonal airflow from the tropics triggers torrential rainfall over coastal regions of East Asia in summer, bringing flooding situations into areas of growing population and industries. However, impacts of rapid seasonal warming of the shallow East China Sea ECS and its pronounced future warming upon extreme summertime rainfall have not been explored. Here we show through cloudresolving atmospheric model simulations that observational tendency for torrential rainfall events over western Japan to occur most frequently in July cannot be reproduced without the rapid seasonal warming of ECS. The simulations also suggest that the future ECS warming will increase precipitation substantially in such an extreme event as observed in midJuly 2012 an...
The East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) circulation and summer rainfall over East China have experience...
In this study, the anomalous characteristics of observed large-scale synoptic fields in the extreme ...
Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2019. This article is posted here by permission o...
Monsoonal airflow from the tropics triggers torrential rainfall over coastal regions of East Asia in...
Sea surface temperature (SST) in the East China Sea (ECS) has undergone a rapid rise in recent decad...
Changes in extreme precipitation have significant impacts on society and the environment. In recent ...
The early summer regional climate change of the East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) is investigated in ...
Atmospheric rivers (ARs), intense water vapor transports associated with extra-tropical cyclones, fr...
This study examined the origin of the systematic underestimation of rainfall anomalies over East Asi...
Portions of East Asia often experienced extremely heavy rainfall events over the last decade. Intens...
Much research is needed regarding the two long-term warming targets of the 2015 Paris Agreement, i....
International audienceIn the developing stage of ENSO, the East Asia summer precipitation (EASP) sho...
In July 2018, Japan experienced two contrasting, yet consecutive, extreme events: a devastating floo...
The occurrence of extreme precipitation events is now a serious concern in recent years in Japan. Th...
DoctorIn this thesis, we quantify the climatic changes over Asian summer monsoon regions at global w...
The East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) circulation and summer rainfall over East China have experience...
In this study, the anomalous characteristics of observed large-scale synoptic fields in the extreme ...
Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2019. This article is posted here by permission o...
Monsoonal airflow from the tropics triggers torrential rainfall over coastal regions of East Asia in...
Sea surface temperature (SST) in the East China Sea (ECS) has undergone a rapid rise in recent decad...
Changes in extreme precipitation have significant impacts on society and the environment. In recent ...
The early summer regional climate change of the East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) is investigated in ...
Atmospheric rivers (ARs), intense water vapor transports associated with extra-tropical cyclones, fr...
This study examined the origin of the systematic underestimation of rainfall anomalies over East Asi...
Portions of East Asia often experienced extremely heavy rainfall events over the last decade. Intens...
Much research is needed regarding the two long-term warming targets of the 2015 Paris Agreement, i....
International audienceIn the developing stage of ENSO, the East Asia summer precipitation (EASP) sho...
In July 2018, Japan experienced two contrasting, yet consecutive, extreme events: a devastating floo...
The occurrence of extreme precipitation events is now a serious concern in recent years in Japan. Th...
DoctorIn this thesis, we quantify the climatic changes over Asian summer monsoon regions at global w...
The East Asian summer monsoon (EASM) circulation and summer rainfall over East China have experience...
In this study, the anomalous characteristics of observed large-scale synoptic fields in the extreme ...
Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2019. This article is posted here by permission o...