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The "Pause" - A Review of Its Significance and Importance to Climate Science 77

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rconnor

Mechanical
Sep 4, 2009
556
----------Introduction---------
A comparison of recent temperature trends in isolation of earlier data, say 1998-present, to long(er)-term temperature trends, say 1970-present, reveals that more recent temperature trends are lower than long-term temperature trends. This has led many, including many prominent climate scientists, to refer to the recent period as a “pause”, “hiatus” or “slowdown”. While in isolation of any other context besides two temperature trends, the term “pause” or “hiatus” may be quasi-accurate, much more context is required to determine whether these terms are statistically and, more importantly, physically accurate.

It should be noted that most times when these terms are used by climate scientists, they keep the quotation marks to indicate the mention-form of the word and are not implying an actual physical pause or hiatus in climate change. The subsequent research into the physical mechanism behind the “pause” has continually demonstrated that it is not indicative of a pause in climate change nor does it suggest a drastic reduction in our estimates of climate sensitivity. However, this fact appears to be lost on many who see the “pause” as some kind of death-blow to the anthropogenic climate change theory or to the relevancy of climate change models.

While this subject has been discussed repeatedly in these forums, it has never been the focus but rather used as a jet-pack style argument to change the conversation from the subject at hand to the “pause” (“Well that can’t be right because the Earth hasn’t warmed in X years!”). Revisiting past threads, I cannot find an example of where someone attempted to defend the “pause” as a valid argument against anthropogenic climate change. It is brought up, debunked and then not defended (and then gets brought up again 5 posts later). The hope is to discuss the scientific literature surrounding the “pause” to help readers understand why the “pause” is simply not a valid argument. While some points have been discussed (usually by me) before, this post does contain new research as well as 2014 and 2015 temperature data, which shed even more light on the topic. The post will be split into three parts: 1) the introduction (and a brief discussion on satellite versus surface station temperature data sets), 2) Does the “pause” suggest that climate change is not due to anthropogenic CO2? and 3) Does the “pause” suggest that climate models are deeply flawed?

------Why I Will Be Using Ground-Based Temperature Data Sets-------
Prior to going into the meat of the discussion, I feel it necessary to discuss why I will be using ground-based temperature data sets and not satellite data sets. Perhaps one of the most hypocritical and confused (or purposefully misleading) arguments on many “skeptic” blogs is the disdain for all ground-based temperature data sets and the promotion of satellite temperature data sets. The main contention with ground-based temperature data sets is that they do not include raw data and require homogenization techniques to produce their end result. While I am not here (in this thread) to discuss the validity of such techniques, it is crucial to understand that satellite temperature data sets go through a much more involved and complex set of calculations, adjustments and homogenizations to get from their raw data to their end product. Both what they measure and where they measure it are very important and highlights the deep confusion (or purposeful misdirection) of “skeptic” arguments that ground-based temperatures are rubbish and satellite-based temperatures are “better”.

[ul][li]Satellites measure radiances in different wavelength bands, not temperature. These measurements are mathematically inverted to obtain indirect inferences of temperature (Uddstrom 1988). Satellite data is closer to paleoclimate temperature reconstructions than modern ground-based temperature data in this way.[/li]
[li]Satellite record is constructed from a series of satellites, meaning the data is not fully homogeneous (Christy et al, 1998). Various homogenization techniques are required to create the record. (RSS information)[/li]
[li]Satellites have to infer the temperature at various altitudes by attempting to mathematically remove the influence of other layers and other interference (RSS information). This is a very difficult thing to do and the methods have gone through multiple challenges and revisions. (Mears and Wentz 2005, Mears et al 2011, Fu et al 2004)[/li]
[li]Satellites do not measure surface temperatures. The closest to “surface” temperatures they get are TLT which is an loose combination of the atmosphere centered roughly around 5 km. It is also not even a direct measurement channel (which themselves are not measuring temperature directly) but a mathematically adjustment of other channels. Furthermore, due to the amount of adjustments involved, TLT has constantly required revisions to correct errors and biases (Christy et al 1998, Fu et al 2005).[/li]
[li]See the discussion on Satellite data sets in IPCC Report (section 3.4.1.2)[/li]
[li]Satellite data and the large amount of homogenization and adjustments required to turn the raw data into useful temperature data are still being question to this day. Unlike ground-based adjustments which lead to trivial changes in trends (from the infamous Karl et al 2015), recent research shows that corrections of perhaps 30% are required for satellite data (Weng et al 2013 .[/li][/ul]

None of this is meant to say the satellite temperature data is “wrong” but it very clearly highlights the deep-set confusion in the “skeptic” camp about temperature data sets. If one finds themselves dismissing ground-based temperature data sets because they require homogenization or adjustments while claiming satellite temperature data sets are superior have simply been lead astray by “skeptics” or are trying to lead others astray. Furthermore, it clearly demonstrates that any attempt to compare satellite data (which measures the troposphere) to the surface temperature output of models is completely misguided (*cough*John Christy *cough*). It is for these reasons that I will use ground-based data in the rest of the post.

Again, I would like to state that I do not wish this to be a focal point of this discussion. I am merely outline why I will be using ground-based temperature data sets and my justification for that as, undoubtedly, someone would claim I should be using satellite temperature datasets. In fact, I appear to be in pretty good company; Carl Mears, one of the chief researchers of RSS (and the same Mears from all the papers above), stated:
Carl Mears said:
My particular dataset (RSS tropospheric temperatures from MSU/AMSU satellites) show less warming than would be expected when compared to the surface temperatures. All datasets contain errors. In this case, I would trust the surface data a little more because the difference between the long term trends in the various surface datasets (NOAA, NASA GISS, HADCRUT, Berkeley etc) are closer to each other than the long term trends from the different satellite datasets. This suggests that the satellite datasets contain more “structural uncertainty” than the surface dataset
If this is a topic of interest to people, perhaps starting your own thread would be advisable as I will not be responding to comments on temperature data sets on this thread. Now, onto the actual discussion…
 
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Is that possible that by some engineering work? "The automobiles exausts gas CO2 converted and break into oxygen and solid carbon particles and other polluted particles collected in box chamber. Oxygen release in air and collected carbon and other pollutent in solid form can be reuse for other" This can cut 85 to 90% pollution.

 
The creation of CO2 is exothermic, so you basically have to put in the amount energy you got from the gasoline combustion in the first place, which means you need about 550kWh of energy to convert all the CO2 back to its constituent atoms from 15 gallons of gas. Note that the first gen Tesla only has a 55 kWh battery. So, yes, you could drag along a bunch of Tesla batteries to do that.

TTFN
I can do absolutely anything. I'm an expert!
homework forum: //faq731-376 forum1529
 
Add hydrogen with a catalist, to make H2O, and solid carbon.

I don't think the goal is to add extra weight so the automobile is green. Would be the same as requiring each of us to wear a personal CO2 absorber.
 
Not sure if this is witchery or if there's something to it. Just a cursory glance across the article, but I find the concept interesting.

It is better to have enough ideas for some of them to be wrong, than to be always right by having no ideas at all.
 
The gas cylinders to hold the hydrogen will be lighter than the batteries I was talking about. You'd need to carry about 13 kg of hydrogen to combine with all the oxygen in the exhaust, assuming perfect conversion. That would require ten 6000-psig cylinders weighing 300 lb each. So, again, you need a trailer to carry the 3000 lb of gas cylinders plus gas lines, etc., but it would be about 75% lighter than the batteries.

TTFN
I can do absolutely anything. I'm an expert!
homework forum: //faq731-376 forum1529
 
I think we're getting into the realm of "perpetual motion" machines now!

1. Burn coal to generate energy, with CO2 as the product of combustion.
2. Use some of the liberated energy to make hydrogen (by electrolysing water).
3. "Add hydrogen with a catalist, to make H2O, and solid carbon."
4. Repeat.

I can't see any flaws in the logic - I think I'd better contact the Patents Office - I'm gonna be SOOOO rich!

 
that was my knee-jerk reaction too ...

another day in paradise, or is paradise one day closer ?
 
In case the argument “it’s changed before”/”it’s natural”/”it’s unexceptional” needed another nail in their coffin (it doesn't really), see this new paper from Kopp et al 2016 which examines sea level rise over the past ~3000 years. The key results are illustrated here. Global sea level is higher and rising faster than any other time in the past 3000 years.

So,
[ul][li]PAGES 2K demonstrates that global temperatures are very likely higher and rising faster than any other period in the common era.[/li]
[li]Zeebe et al 2015 demonstrates that atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations are very likely rising faster than any other period in the last 66 million years.[/li]
[li]Kopp et al 2016 demonstrates that global sea level is very likely higher and rising faster than any other period in the common era.[/li]
[li]All while, as PAGES 2K indicates, “This pre-industrial cooling trend was likely caused by natural factors that continued to operate through the 20th century, making the 20th century warming more difficult to explain without the likely impact of increased greenhouse gasses” (not to mention slumping solar activity since 1960).[/li]
[li]Whatever way you slice it, it ain't natural.[/li][/ul]

Yet we have people, without any evidence to support these statements, saying things like:
“I do not see how a scientifically literate person would conclude that our recent climate trends are unnatural.”

As I tried to demonstrate with the “pause” and "models are wrong" argument at the beginning of this thread, many of these statements are made in ignorance of the data, research and evidence. While bringing in the relevant information to provide the proper insight to clean up misinformation can be lengthy, it is incredibly important, especially given the gravitas of the topic.

The climate change debate is a minefield of unsupported statements and incorrect analyses (from both sides), which makes it very difficult to navigate through for the neutral reader looking for information. My attempt here was to bring forward the latest and most credible data, research and evidence to help clarify things. While I never hoped this would sway those with hard-line opinions, I do hope it has allowed some to see what the science is actually telling us. I also do not claim to be bias-free but I have always tried to use and directly link peer-reviewed papers and internationally respected data sources, which filters out more bias than any other source (certainly more than non-reviewed, unsupported blogs or tabloid articles) (and those that want to prescribe to some conspiracy theory involving the entire scientific institution, well, I feel you’re hopelessly lost). I have repeatedly asked posters on the other side to follow a similar standard, with very little success. I do hope that if people decide to continue the discussion in the future that this aspect improves (but I’ll leave that to IRstuff!).
 
Three things in life are certain

[ol 1]
[li]People will have babies[/li]
[li]The climate will change[/li]
[li]If you keep repeating the same points the grant money will dry up[/li]
[/ol]

So, in celebration of the third point some of the usual suspects have come up with

pause_is_back_rzciz2.jpg


Sorry I can't link directly to the paper. You should be able to link from here
Figure 1 shows the story, great agreement between the temperature record models and computer models during the learning phase of the machine learning algorithms (ie knob twiddling), followed by a rapid divergence when asked to hindcast, probably due to overfitting. There again maths has always been a bit of a problem for at least one of those authors. Can you pick which year is the end of the knob twiddling for CMIP-5? Go on, have a guess.

pause_fig1_la1slt.jpg


The conclusion is a bit of back slapping, saying they reckon they can explain it all. Odd that all these new effects only appeared after 1990, but wow, them's the breaks. It's a pity they didn't publish it last year, but The Pause is Busted was on-message for the party in Paris.

Wake me up in 25 years when we've got one more independent datapoint to add to the trend, and maybe we can learn something new.


Cheers

Greg Locock


New here? Try reading these, they might help FAQ731-376
 
greg, surely you don't mean that we can't rely on extrapolations of historical data ?

but we can if we have a good theoretical basis, eg Newton's laws.

and then to climate change ... increased CO2 = increased temperature = the road to wreck and ruin.

another day in paradise, or is paradise one day closer ?
 
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