There are plenty of observations which prove that during the recent
decades global sea surface temperature has controlled the CO2 content in atmosphere.
However the complexity of sea surface makes for instance any application of Henry's law be too uncertain, even impossible, to reach any quantitative results concerning the influence
of global sea surface temperature on the CO2 content in atmosphere.
In
August global sea surface temperatures reached record levels — the average temperature was 1.17 degrees Fahrenheit higher than the 20th century average.
The
average global sea surface temperature for the year - to - date was the highest for January — November in the 136 - year period of record, at 0.72 °C (1.30 °F) above average, surpassing the previous record set last year by 0.09 °C (0.16 °F).
A Global Sea Surface Carbon Observing System: Inorganic And Organic Carbon Dynamics in Coastal Oceans.
That now means, within the last three years,
when global sea surface temperatures have been at their highest, we have seen the strongest hurricane globally, the strongest hurricane in the northern hemisphere, the strongest hurricane in the southern hemisphere, and the strongest storms in both the Pacific and the open Atlantic, with Irma.
If the
measured Global Sea Surface Temperatures as measure by AMSR - E since 2003 vary between +2 C and — 2.5 C, and the trend has demonstrated a slight decline, whom should we believe?
They compared the results of 12,842 simulations based on the
current global sea surface temperatures, with 25,893 results computed on the assumption that global warming had never occurred — that fossil fuel burning had not raised CO2 to today's levels and ocean surfaces were cooler.
For the oceans, the
November global sea surface temperature was 0.84 °C (1.51 °F) above the 20th century average of 15.8 °C (60.4 °F), the highest for November on record, surpassing the previous record set last year by 0.20 °C (0.36 °F).
Furthermore, they fail to reconcile their hypothesis with the established large - scale warming evident
from global sea surface temperature data that, again, can not be influenced by the local, non-climatic factors they argue contaminate evidence for surface warming.
Other analyses of Eemian data
find global sea surface temperature warmer than the Late Holocene by 0.7 ± 0.6 °C [77] and all - surface warming of 2 °C [78], all in reasonable accord with our prescription.
Texas Rep. Lamar Smith, the committee's chairman, subpoenaed NOAA in late 2015 for records related to the so - called «Karl study» that
adjusted global sea surface temperature upwards, eliminating the «pause» in global warming since 1998.
Composite analysis
of global sea surface temperature during unusually wet and dry years also suggests a linkage between reconstructed rainfall and ENSO.
The
average global sea surface temperature tied with 2010 as the second highest for January — August in the 135 - year period of record, behind 1998, while the average land surface temperature was the fifth highest.
According to NASA's satellite data, sea levels show a 6 mm decline in 2010 and AMSR -
E Global Sea Surface Temperature Variations indicate that oceans are cooling.
... Within the last three years,
when global sea surface temperatures have been at their highest, we have seen the strongest hurricane globally, the strongest hurricane in the northern hemisphere, the strongest hurricane in the southern hemisphere, and the strongest storms in both the Pacific and the open Atlantic, with [Hurricane] Irma.»
Ocean Only: The June - August
global sea surface temperature was 1.13 °F (0.63 °C), above the 20th century average of 61.5 °F (16.4 °C), the highest for June - August on record.
Ocean Only: The August
global sea surface temperature was 1.17 °F (0.65 °C) above the 20th century average of 61.4 °F (16.4 °C), the highest on record for August.
Shabbar, A. & Skinner, W. Summer drought patterns in Canada and the relationship to
global sea surface temperatures.
The intensification is primarily attributed to a mega-El Niño / Southern Oscillation (a leading mode of interannual - to - interdecadal variation of
global sea surface temperature) and the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation, and further influenced by hemispherical asymmetric global warming.
«Solar Total Irradiance Variations and
the Global Sea Surface Temperature Record.»
Phrases with «global sea surface»