The Interpretation of Short Climate Records, with Comments on the North Atlantic and Southern Oscillations
- 1 February 1999
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
- Vol. 80 (2) , 245-255
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0477(1999)080<0245:tioscr>2.0.co;2
Abstract
This pedagogical note reminds the reader that the interpretation of climate records is dependent upon understanding the behavior of stochastic processes. In particular, before concluding that one is seeing evidence for trends, shifts in the mean, or changes in oscillation periods, one must rule out the purely random fluctuations expected from stationary time series. The example of the North Atlantic oscillation (NAO) is mainly used here: the spectral density is nearly white (frequency power law ≈ s-0.2) with slight broadband features near 8 and 2.5 yr. By generating synthetic but stationary time series, one can see exhibited many of the features sometimes exciting attention as being of causal climate significance. Such a display does not disprove the hypothesis of climate change, but it provides a simple null hypothesis for what is seen. In addition, it is shown that the linear predictive skill for the NAO index must be very slight (less than 3% of the variance). A brief comparison with the South... Abstract This pedagogical note reminds the reader that the interpretation of climate records is dependent upon understanding the behavior of stochastic processes. In particular, before concluding that one is seeing evidence for trends, shifts in the mean, or changes in oscillation periods, one must rule out the purely random fluctuations expected from stationary time series. The example of the North Atlantic oscillation (NAO) is mainly used here: the spectral density is nearly white (frequency power law ≈ s-0.2) with slight broadband features near 8 and 2.5 yr. By generating synthetic but stationary time series, one can see exhibited many of the features sometimes exciting attention as being of causal climate significance. Such a display does not disprove the hypothesis of climate change, but it provides a simple null hypothesis for what is seen. In addition, it is shown that the linear predictive skill for the NAO index must be very slight (less than 3% of the variance). A brief comparison with the South...Keywords
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