The Structure of Climate Variability Across Scales

Franzke, Christian L. E. ORCIDiD
Barbosa, Susana ORCIDiD
Blender, Richard
Fredriksen, Hege-Beate ORCIDiD
Laepple, Thomas ORCIDiD
Lambert, Fabrice ORCIDiD
Nilsen, Tine
Rypdal, Kristoffer
Rypdal, Martin
Scotto, Manuel G, ORCIDiD
Vannitsem, Stéphane ORCIDiD
Watkins, Nicholas W. ORCIDiD
Yang, Lichao
Yuan, Naiming ORCIDiD

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1029/2019RG000657
Persistent URL: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/9258
Franzke, Christian L. E.; Barbosa, Susana; Blender, Richard; Fredriksen, Hege-Beate; Laepple, Thomas; Lambert, Fabrice; Nilsen, Tine; Rypdal, Kristoffer; Rypdal, Martin; Scotto, Manuel G,; Vannitsem, Stéphane; Watkins, Nicholas W.; Yang, Lichao; Yuan, Naiming, 2020: The Structure of Climate Variability Across Scales. In: Reviews of Geophysics, 58, 2, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1029/2019RG000657. 

Abstract

One of the most intriguing facets of the climate system is that it exhibits variability across all temporal and spatial scales; pronounced examples are temperature and precipitation. The structure of this variability, however, is not arbitrary. Over certain spatial and temporal ranges, it can be described by scaling relationships in the form of power laws in probability density distributions and autocorrelation functions. These scaling relationships can be quantified by scaling exponents which measure how the variability changes across scales and how the intensity changes with frequency of occurrence. Scaling determines the relative magnitudes and persistence of natural climate fluctuations. Here, we review various scaling mechanisms and their relevance for the climate system. We show observational evidence of scaling and discuss the application of scaling properties and methods in trend detection, climate sensitivity analyses, and climate prediction.