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According to a NASA study published in the April issue of
Jounral of Climate, global warming may raise average summer temperatures in the
eastern United States
nearly 10 degrees Fahrenheit by the 2080s.
NASA scientists determined eastern U.S. summer daily high temperatures
that currently average in the low-to-mid-80s Fahrenheit will most likely soar
into the low-to-mid-90s by the 2080s.
The global model, one of the models used in the recently
issued climate report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC),
was utilized in this study to identify future changes in large-scale
atmospheric circulation patterns due to the build up of greenhouse gases. This
information was then fed into the weather prediction model to forecast
summer-to-summer temperature variability in the eastern United States
during the 2080s.
"Relatively cool waters in the eastern Pacific often
result in stubborn summer high-pressure systems over the eastern states that
block storms, reducing the frequency of precipitation below normal," said
study co-author Richard Healy of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
"Less frequent storms result in higher surface and atmospheric
temperatures that then feed back on the atmospheric circulation to further
reduce storm frequency and raise surface temperatures even more."
The global model simulated rainfall too frequently, so that
its surface temperatures were not appropriately sensitive to interannual
changes in Pacific sea surface temperatures. "Since the weather prediction
model simulated the frequency and timing of summer precipitation more reliably
than the global model, its daily high temperature predictions for the future
are also believed to be more accurate,” added co-author Leonard Druyan, NASA
Goddard Institute for Space Studies and Columbia University.
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