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What Do Observational Datasets Say about Modeled Tropospheric Temperature Trends since 1979?

Authors :
David H. Douglass
Roy W. Spencer
Benjamin M. Herman
Thomas N. Chase
John R. Christy
Roger A. Pielke
J. J. Hnilo
Philip J. Klotzbach
Richard T. McNider
Source :
Remote Sensing, Vol 2, Iss 9, Pp 2148-2169 (2010), Remote Sensing; Volume 2; Issue 9; Pages: 2148-2169
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2010.

Abstract

Updated tropical lower tropospheric temperature datasets covering the period 1979–2009 are presented and assessed for accuracy based upon recent publications and several analyses conducted here. We conclude that the lower tropospheric temperature (TLT) trend over these 31 years is +0.09 ± 0.03 °C decade−1. Given that the surface temperature (Tsfc) trends from three different groups agree extremely closely among themselves (~ +0.12 °C decade−1) this indicates that the “scaling ratio” (SR, or ratio of atmospheric trend to surface trend: TLT/Tsfc) of the observations is ~0.8 ± 0.3. This is significantly different from the average SR calculated from the IPCC AR4 model simulations which is ~1.4. This result indicates the majority of AR4 simulations tend to portray significantly greater warming in the troposphere relative to the surface than is found in observations. The SR, as an internal, normalized metric of model behavior, largely avoids the confounding influence of short-term fluctuations such as El Niños which make direct comparison of trend magnitudes less confident, even over multi-decadal periods.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20724292
Volume :
2
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Remote Sensing
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....47de8b2fb566525459e8f9506a5f224b