https://essopenarchive.org/users/955275/articles/1324356-effects-of-warming-and-stratospheric-aerosol-injection-on-tropical-cyclone-distribution-and-frequency-results-from-a-high-resolution-global-circulation-model

*Authors*
Andrew Feder, David Allan Randall, Donald Dazlich

*Abstract*
As global circulation models (GCMs) have increased in spatial resolution,
more realistic tropical cyclones (TCs) and TC distributions have been
simulated. Whereas prior research on TC climatologies has relied on proxies
like Potential Intensity and synthetic storm models, the cyclones simulated
by newer “storm-resolving” GCMs can now be analyzed directly. This is
particularly useful for studying projected global storm distributions under
radically altered future climates, including high-emissions warming
scenarios, and those shaped by climate interventions. Such interventions
include various directed changes in global albedo, such as Stratospheric
Aerosol Injection (SAI). In this paper, we utilize a new high-resolution
model configuration to conduct experiments examining the effects of SAI on
tropical cyclones. These experiments are constructed based on prior work on
SAI, using the GLENS ensemble. Our analysis focuses on three 10-year
simulations conducted using 30-km grid spacing. The first is a recent-past
calibration run. The second uses the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change climate pathway SSP 8.5, for the years 2090-2099, with no SAI. The
third simulation also uses SSP 8.5 for the years 2090-2099, but with SAI
beginning in 2020 to maintain a global temperature rise of no more than 1.5
K. We use a novel TC-tracking algorithm to analyze resulting changes in
storm tracks and properties. Our results show that while SAI may return
global storm counts back to late 20th-century levels, there are large
basin-by-basin changes in storm number and intensity. These are strongly
driven by increases in mean ENSO indices with warming and especially with
intervention.

*Source: ESS Open Archive*

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