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Implications for Climate Sensitivity from the Response to Individual Forcings

Authors :
Kate Marvel
Gavin A Schmidt
Ron L Miller
Larissa Nazarenko
Source :
Nature Climate Change. 6
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2015.

Abstract

Climate sensitivity to doubled CO2 is a widely-used metric of the large-scale response to external forcing. Climate models predict a wide range for two commonly used definitions: the transient climate response (TCR: the warming after 70 years of CO2 concentrations that riseat 1 per year), and the equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS: the equilibrium temperature change following a doubling of CO2 concentrations). Many observational datasets have been used to constrain these values, including temperature trends over the recent past 16, inferences from paleo-climate and process-based constraints from the modern satellite eras. However, as the IPCC recently reported different classes of observational constraints produce somewhat incongruent ranges. Here we show that climate sensitivity estimates derived from recent observations must account for the efficacy of each forcing active during the historical period. When we use single forcing experiments to estimate these efficacies and calculate climate sensitivity from the observed twentieth-century warming, our estimates of both TCR and ECS are revised upward compared to previous studies, improving the consistency with independent constraints.

Subjects

Subjects :
Meteorology And Climatology

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17586798
Volume :
6
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Nature Climate Change
Notes :
NNX14AB99A
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20160012693
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate2888