White 1997
finds sea surface temperatures change by 0.1 °C due to the 11 year solar cycle, looking at data from 1955 to 1994.
Not exact matches
The team analyzed an index of
sea surface temperatures from the Bering Sea and found that in years with higher than average Arctic temperatures, changes in atmospheric circulation resulted in the aforementioned anomalous climates throughout North Ameri
sea surface temperatures from the Bering
Sea and found that in years with higher than average Arctic temperatures, changes in atmospheric circulation resulted in the aforementioned anomalous climates throughout North Ameri
Sea and
found that in years with higher than average Arctic
temperatures,
changes in atmospheric circulation resulted in the aforementioned anomalous climates throughout North America.
Hi Andrew, Paper you may have, but couldn't
find on «The phase relation between atmospheric carbon dioxide and global
temperature» CO2 lagging temp
change, which really turns the entire AGW argument on its head: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921818112001658 Highlights: ►
Changes in global atmospheric CO2 are lagging 11 — 12 months behind changes in global sea surface temperature ► Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not tracking changes in human emi
Changes in global atmospheric CO2 are lagging 11 — 12 months behind
changes in global sea surface temperature ► Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not tracking changes in human emi
changes in global
sea surface temperature ►
Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not tracking changes in human emi
Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not tracking
changes in human emi
changes in human emissions.
The problem here is that estimates of
changes in
sea surface temperature and the depth of the warm mixed layer might be very unreliable, since the general behavior of the Atlantic circulation is only now being directly observed — and the most recent
findings are that flow rates vary over a whole order of magnitude:
Investigators outside NOAA are
finding interesting trends and showing that they seem to be correlated with trends in such variables as SST [
Sea Surface Temperature] in key regions, the
changes of which almost certainly are due to human - induced
changes in the climate, though having enough data to get all the statistics right is often problematic.
This is particularly
found in
changes to the
surface air
temperature,
sea level pressure (Fig. 3), and 500 - hPa geopotential height fields.
280 Though I can not
find any literature on equatorial warming triggering reorganization for the D - O events, there are reports, for the glacial - interglacial transition, that Pacific
sea surface temperatures warmed 3,000 years before
changes in ice volumes.
This is achieved through the study of three independent records, the net heat flux into the oceans over 5 decades, the
sea - level
change rate based on tide gauge records over the 20th century, and the
sea -
surface temperature variations... We
find that the total radiative forcing associated with solar cycles variations is about 5 to 7 times larger than just those associated with the TSI variations, thus implying the necessary existence of an amplification mechanism, although without pointing to which one.
Recently, Willis (2010) used satellite observations of
sea surface height and sensor buoy observations of velocity, salinity and
temperature of the Atlantic Ocean at 41oN and
found no significant
change in the AMOC strength between 2002 and 2009.
Hi Andrew, Paper you may have, but couldn't
find on «The phase relation between atmospheric carbon dioxide and global
temperature» CO2 lagging temp
change, which really turns the entire AGW argument on its head: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921818112001658 Highlights: ►
Changes in global atmospheric CO2 are lagging 11 — 12 months behind changes in global sea surface temperature ► Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not tracking changes in human emi
Changes in global atmospheric CO2 are lagging 11 — 12 months behind
changes in global sea surface temperature ► Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not tracking changes in human emi
changes in global
sea surface temperature ►
Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not tracking changes in human emi
Changes in atmospheric CO2 are not tracking
changes in human emi
changes in human emissions.
Dai examined observational data and climate model output to see how
sea surface temperatures and aridity (decreased streamflow and precipitation)
changed over time and to
find any similarities in the features of these
changes.
The new
finding of the importance of multiple ocean
surface temperature changes to the multi-decadal global warming accelerations and slowdowns is supported by a set of computer modeling experiments, in which observed
sea surface temperature changes are specified in individual ocean basins, separately.
That is, Lin
found that clouds in the tropics do
change in response to warmer
sea surface temperatures, but that the cloud
changes serve to slightly enhance warming at the
surface.