Abstract:
In view of the non-normal distribution existed in summer extreme high temperature (SEHT) in China, a skewed probability distribution function is proposed to study the SEHT, which derived from Box-Cox Transformation of SEHT data. Based on a skewness index (SI) and the most probable extreme high temperature (MPEHT), the characteristics and evolutionary rules of the probability distributions in the SEHT are described before and after 1980s. The results show that from 1961 to 2008, the probability distributions of the SEHT at most meteorological stations are positive skew, and particularly in the southeastern Southwest China. While the probability distributions show negative skewness in most areas of the south to the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River. The highest magnitudes of the SEHT lie in the central-eastern China and the western Northwest China, secondary magnitudes lie in Northeast China and most of Inner Mongolia, and the smallest magnitudes in the central Northwest China and most parts of Southwest China.Before and after 1980s, the probability distribution changes greatly in most parts of central-eastern China, central Southeast China, most of Xinjiang, and northeastern Inner Mongolia, respectively. The results indicate that there are some weakening trends for both positive skewed distribution pattern and negative skewed distribution pattern, and the MPEHT has a common trend to approximate the mean values of the SEHT, which show that the changes of the distribution patterns can reflect some change direction of the MPEHT. There is a significant cooling trend in those areas especially for the MPEHT, while in the secondary or smallest magnitudes regions, obvious warming trend is found.Further study on the responses of SI and MPEMT to different time scales of SHET suggests that sliding removing some sequential SEHT has influences on SI and MPEMT.The SI is affected obviously to south of the Yangtze River, but changes relatively less in other areas. The larger time scale of SEHT is removed, the more significant impact appears on the probability distribution. MPEMT nearly remains the same when removing different time scale of SHET, so it is a relatively stable value, and can be regarded as a possible new way to define a threshold of extreme high temperature events.