Publication | Open Access
Strong Intensification of Hourly Rainfall Extremes by Urbanization
137
Citations
26
References
2020
Year
EngineeringExtreme WeatherUrban Climate ImpactClimate ModelingUrban WeatherEarth ScienceVertical UpliftSocial SciencesUrban MeteorologyApplied MeteorologyUrban ClimatologyHydroclimate ModelingClimate ChangeHydrometeorologyMeteorologyGeographyExtreme RainfallClimate DynamicsClimatologyUrban GeographyDroughtHourly Rainfall ExtremesRainfall ExtremesUrban Climate
Abstract Although observations and modeling studies show that heavy rainfall is increasing in many regions, how changes will manifest themselves on sub‐daily timescales remains highly uncertain. Here, for the first time, we combine observational analysis and high‐resolution modeling results to examine changes to extreme rainfall intensities in urbanized Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. We find that hourly intensities of extreme rainfall have increased by ~35% over the last three decades, nearly 3 times more than in surrounding rural areas, with daily intensities showing much weaker increases. Our modeling results confirm that the urban heat island effect creates a more unstable atmosphere, increased vertical uplift and moisture convergence. This, combined with weak surface winds in the Tropics, causes intensification of rainfall extremes over the city, with reduced rainfall in the surrounding region.
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