Detecting Climate Change due to Increasing Carbon Dioxide
- 15 August 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 209 (4458) , 763-768
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.209.4458.763
Abstract
The observed interannual variability of temperature at 60°N has been investigated. The results indicate that the surface warming due to increased carbon dioxide which is predicted by three-dimensional climate models should be detectable now. It is not, possibly because the predicted warming is being delayed more than a decade by ocean thermal inertia, or because there is a compensating cooling due to other factors. Further consideration of the uncertainties in model predictions and of the likely delays introduced by ocean thermal inertia extends the range of time for the detection of warming, if it occurs, to the year 2000. The effects of increasing carbon dioxide should be looked for in several variables simultaneously in order to minimize the ambiguities that could result from unrecognized compensating cooling.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- A CO2-climate sensitivity study with a mathematical model of the global climateNature, 1979
- Increased atmospheric CO2: Zonal and seasonal estimates of the effect on the radiation energy balance and surface temperatureJournal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 1979
- A seasonal zonal energy balance climate model with an interactive lower layerJournal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 1979
- An assessment of the possible future climatic impact of carbon dioxide increases based on a coupled one‐dimensional atmospheric‐oceanic modelJournal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 1979
- Estimates of the Natural Variability of Time-Averaged Temperatures over the United StatesMonthly Weather Review, 1978
- Climate modeling through radiative‐convective modelsReviews of Geophysics, 1978
- Interactions between Ice-Albedo, Lapse-Rate and Cloud-Top Feedbacks: An Analysis of the Nonlinear Response of a GCM Climate ModelJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 1977
- A Radiative-Convective Model Study of the CO2Climate ProblemJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 1977
- An Overview of Climatic Variability and its Causal MechanismsQuaternary Research, 1976
- Variance Spectrum of Holocene Climatic Fluctuations in the North Atlantic SectorJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 1974