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What we wish to learn Today:

Explore the recent changes in climate, the possible causes of climate change, and the workings of climate models. Discover how shifts in ocean circulation and increases in greenhouse gases impact global temperatures. Learn about the role of volcanoes and sunspots and how climate models predict future climate change.

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What we wish to learn Today:

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  1. What we wish to learn Today: Climate Models • How has the climate changed during the recent past? • What can we say about current climate change? • How do climate models work and what are their predictions for the future?

  2. Possible Causes of Climate Change • Long-Term • Solar Luminosity • Shifting Continents • Greenhouse gases • Medium-Term • Orbital parameters • Greenhouse gases • Short-Term • Oceans • Sunspots • Volcanoes • Greenhouse gases Power: 4 x 1026 W 2 x 1017 W

  3. Causes of Climate change A. Tectonic B. Orbital C. Oceans / GHG D. ??

  4. Global Temperature Departures in temp (deg C) from 1961-1990 mean Data from thermometers Year Recent Trends in Temperature

  5. Sunspot number Little Ice Age Solar Activity and Climate Maunder Minimum: Very few sunspots were seen between 1645 and 1715 Corresponds to the time of the “Little Ace Age”

  6. BUT, Change in sunspot number is greater than change in solar radiation. The change in solar radiation is only about 0.1%, too small to account for the full temperature shifts – an ongoing investigation… Sunspots and measured solar radiation

  7. Ash on cars Pre-1991 Post-1991 VOLCANO !

  8. Volcanic eruptions cool global temperature Volcanoes spew out ~160x less CO2 than humans do…

  9. Effects of El Niño and volcanoes on air temperatures Satellite troposphere temperature data ’97-98 El Niño El Niño index El Niño effect on temperature Satellite data minus El Niño effect Residual Trend: 0.11°C per decade Volcano effect on temperature Pinatubo After removing El Niño and volcanoes

  10. Summary of Climate Forcingsin “energy” terms of Watts per m2 Orbital variations ~ 0.5 W m-2 / century (occurs over long time scales) Solar variation ~ 0.29 W m-2 peak-to-peak over ~2 centuries Greenhouse Gases - past: ~ +0.0067 W m-2 / century CO2, 4050 BC to ~1000 AD ~ +0.0016 W m-2 / century CH4, 4050 BC to ~ 1500 AD ~ +0.0006 W m-2 / century N2O, 4050 BC to ~ 1000 BC Volcanic eruptions 0 down to -10 W m-2, but short lived (a few years). Estimated long-term mean forcing ~ -0.3 W m-2 * Current GHG emission – Doubling of CO2 ~ 4 W m-2 !

  11. CO2 Temp. CH4 Past and Modern Changes on Earth

  12. Global distribution of CO2, 1992-2001 N. Hemisphere S. Hemisphere

  13. Global distribution of CH4, 1992-2001

  14. Modern Glaciations Atmospheric CO2 concentration (ppm) Deglaciations Temperature variations (ºC) Atmospheric CO2 concentration and temperature are correlated in the Vostok ice core

  15. 6 5 4 3 2 1 1 0.5 0 N.H. Temperature (°C) 0 -0.5 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 Paleoclimate provides perspective on where we are headed … Global Temperature (°C) IPCC Projections to 2100

  16. USING MODELS TO PREDICT CLIMATE Types of Models: Physical Models (a desktop globe) Statistical Models (a regression, y=mx+b) Conceptual Models (a flow chart) Computer Models (Global Climate Models, GCMs) “Climate models are only sophisticated tools, not crystal balls” “A useful model is not the one which is true, but the one that is informative” “ …all models are wrong, some are useful”

  17. What goes into a climate model?

  18. “Climate change” is not just an environmental issue… INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL ON CLIMATE CHANGE (IPCC)

  19. World CO2 emissions Gigatons of Carbon The models must use “scenarios” of future GHG emissions There are many different “storylines”

  20. Pick your future… Source: IPCC TAR 2001

  21. Climate models work pretty well… Rainfall [annual] Which is observed and which is modeled ?

  22. … but there is some variation Prediction of the 1997-1998 El Nino by 6 different GCM models

  23. Models show that anthropogenic causes of temperature change explain what has already occurred. Courtesy W. Washington/NCAR

  24. Predictions of large climate changes even by the 2050s Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research

  25. c c Unmitigated Emissions Stabilization of CO2 at 750 ppm Stabilization of CO2 at 550 ppm c But, we control our destiny -- Temperature from the present day to the 2080s Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research

  26. Take Home Message: Prediction is Difficult, Especially into the future…

  27. Summary Recent changes in Earth's paleoclimate record are likely due to shifts in ocean circulation, and the effects of greenhouse gas increases.  Volcanoes have had only a small effect, and the sun spot record cannot account for the heat input needed. Temperature changes and greenhouse gas abundances are correlated. Rapid global warming is underway and models have been developed to predict the effects of these changes. Global Climate Models (GCMs) predict a much altered climate on Earth during the next century.

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