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Published byChristal Dalton Modified over 9 years ago
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Land-ocean surface temperature contrast and radiative forcing Hugo Lambert University of Exeter thanks to Mark Webb and Manoj Joshi
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1955- 2003 Lambert and Chiang, (2007)
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OLS regression for 1955-2003 Model Φ GFDL CM 2 01.4 +/- 0.2 GFDL CM 2 11.5 +/- 0.2 GISS E-R1.5 +/- 0.1 MIROC 1.5 +/- 0.2 MRI0.9 +/- 0.2 Observations1.6 +/- 0.1
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OLS regression for 1955-2003: residual variance Modelr GFDL CM 2 00.020 GFDL CM 2 10.021 GISS E-R0.013 MIROC0.016 MRI0.029 Observations0.009
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Into the future
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Some references Hansen et al., (1983) Manabe et al., (1991) Huntingford and Cox, (2000) Sutton et al., (2007) Joshi et al., (2008)
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Structure of talk Motivation Simple model of land-sea contrast. Comparison with complex models. Some stuff that I don't really understand.
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∆N = ∆Q, ∆T = 0
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∆N = 0, ∆T = ∆T eq
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∆T = 3K, ∆N = ∆T / λ
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∆A in some idealised 2xCO 2 and prescribed SST experiments.
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And ∆T L against ∆T O
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Structure of talk Motivation Simple model of land-sea contrast. Comparison with complex models. Some stuff that I don't really understand.
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© Crown copyright Met Office CRUTEM3 vs HadISST2 1900-19541955-2008
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© Crown copyright Met Office CRUTEM3 vs HadISST2 (masked to 1900) 1900-19541955-2008
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© Crown copyright Met Office 1900-19541955-2008 CRUTEM3 vs HadISST2 (masked to 1900) 1.5 +/- 0.4 0.7 +/- 0.3
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© Crown copyright Met Office 1900-19541955-2008 HadISST2 (masked to 1900)
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© Crown copyright Met Office 1900-19541955-2008 1900-1954, constant Φ HadISST2 (masked to 1900)
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Conclusions Annual mean ∆T L / ∆T O is remarkably constant – especially in observations. Simple model and GCM study suggests powerful land-ocean heat transport. Early 20 th century behaviour is different / problematic.
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