Climate Dynamics: A Network-Based Approach for the Analysis of Global Precipitation
Stefania Scarsoglio, Francesco Laio, Luca Ridolfi

TL;DR
This study employs complex network theory to analyze the spatial and temporal patterns of global precipitation over seventy years, revealing key regions with distinct connectivity and the influence of extreme events on precipitation dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a network-based methodology to investigate global precipitation patterns, highlighting the impact of extreme events and planetary waves on spatial connectivity.
Findings
Sahel and Eastern Australia are highly connected dry regions.
Extreme events reduce long-range precipitation correlations.
Network sensitivity analysis confirms key regions as supernodes.
Abstract
Precipitation is one of the most important meteorological variables for defining the climate dynamics, but the spatial patterns of precipitation have not been fully investigated yet. The complex network theory, which provides a robust tool to investigate the statistical interdependence of many interacting elements, is used here to analyze the spatial dynamics of annual precipitation over seventy years (1941-2010). The precipitation network reveals significant spatial variability with barely connected regions, as Eastern China and Japan, and highly connected regions, such as the African Sahel, Eastern Australia and, to a lesser extent, Northern Europe. Sahel and Eastern Australia are remarkably dry regions, where low amounts of rainfall are uniformly distributed on continental scales and small-scale extreme events are rare. As a consequence, the precipitation gradient is low, making…
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