North American extreme precipitation events and related large-scale meteorological patterns: A review of statistical methods, dynamics, modeling, and trends

This paper surveys the current state of knowledge regarding large-scale meteorological patterns (LSMPs) associated with short-duration (less than 1 week) extreme precipitation events over North America. In contrast to teleconnections, which are typically defined based on the characteristic spatial variations of a meteorological field or on the remote circulation response to a known forcing, LSMPs are defined relative to the occurrence of a specific phenomenon-here, extreme precipitation-and with an emphasis on the synoptic scales that have a primary influence in individual events, have medium-range weather predictability, and are well-resolved in both weather and climate models. For the LSMP relationship with extreme precipitation, we consider the previous literature with respect to definitions and data, dynamical mechanisms, model representation, and climate change trends. There is considerable uncertainty in identifying extremes based on existing observational precipitation data and some limitations in analyzing the associated LSMPs in reanalysis data. Many different definitions of "extreme" are in use, making it difficult to directly compare different studies. Dynamically, several types of meteorological systems-extratropical cyclones, tropical cyclones, mesoscale convective systems, and mesohighs-and several mechanisms-fronts, atmospheric rivers, and orographic ascent-have been shown to be important aspects of extreme precipitation LSMPs. The extreme precipitation is often realized through mesoscale processes organized, enhanced, or triggered by the LSMP. Understanding of model representation, trends, and projections for LSMPs is at an early stage, although some promising analysis techniques have been identified and the LSMP perspective is useful for evaluating the model dynamics associated with extremes.

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Author Barlow, Mathew
Gutowski, William J.
Gyakum, John R.
Katz, Richard W.
Lim, Young-Kwon
Schumacher, Russ S.
Wehner, Michael F.
Agel, Laurie
Bosilovich, Michael
Collow, Allison
Gershunov, Alexander
Grotjahn, Richard
Leung, Ruby
Milrad, Shawn
Min, Seung-Ki
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2019-12-20T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
Alternate Identifier N/A
Resource Version N/A
Topic Category geoscientificInformation
Progress N/A
Metadata Date 2023-08-18T19:07:56.027456
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:22967
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Barlow, Mathew, Gutowski, William J., Gyakum, John R., Katz, Richard W., Lim, Young-Kwon, Schumacher, Russ S., Wehner, Michael F., Agel, Laurie, Bosilovich, Michael, Collow, Allison, Gershunov, Alexander, Grotjahn, Richard, Leung, Ruby, Milrad, Shawn, Min, Seung-Ki. (2019). North American extreme precipitation events and related large-scale meteorological patterns: A review of statistical methods, dynamics, modeling, and trends. UCAR/NCAR - Library. http://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7zp4973. Accessed 23 June 2025.

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