Physical Society Colloquium
Tropical cyclones and climate change
Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences & McGill Space
Institute McGill University
Tropical cyclones are among the deadliest and costliest natural disasters.
It is, therefore, a pressing question of physical science to understand how
anthropogenic climate change will alter the number and intensity of tropical
cyclones. I will review the consensus expectations for these changes, the
techniques used to address these questions, and several of my recent results.
First, I will show that dynamic factors play a central role in determining
radiative forced changes in the global number of tropical cyclones. The
time-mean large-scale atmospheric circulation can provoke changes in tropical
cyclone number that exceed those of thermodynamic factors. Second, I will show
that the number of tropical cyclones is sensitive to temperature in a range of
turbulent moist-convective flows.
Friday, January 22nd 2016, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 112)
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