期刊论文详细信息
DERIVING GLOBAL CLIMATE SENSITIVITY FROM PALEOCLIMATE RECONSTRUCTIONS
Article
关键词: ICE-CORE RECORD;    GREENHOUSE;    MODEL;    DUST;   
DOI  :  10.1038/360573a0
来源: SCIE
【 摘 要 】

To assess the future impact of anthropogenic greenhouse gases on global climate, we need a reliable estimate of the sensitivity of the Earth's climate to changes in radiative forcing. Climate sensitivity is conventionally defined as the equilibrium surface temperature increase for carbon dioxide doubling, DELTAT2x. Uncertainties in cloud processes spread general circulation model (GCM) estimates of this parameter over the range 1.5 < DELTAT2x < 4.5-degrees-C (refs 1, 2). An alternative to model-based estimates is in principle available from the reconstruction of past climates3-6, which implicitly includes cloud feedback. Here we retrieve the sensitivity of two palaeoclimates, one colder and one warmer than present, by independently reconstructing both the equilibrium surface temperature change and the radiative forcing. Our results yield DELTAT2x = 2.3 +/- 0.9-degrees-C. This range is comparable with estimates from GCMs and inferences from recent temperature observations and ocean models7,8. Future application of the method to additional climates in the geological record might constrain climate sensitivity enough to narrow the model uncertainties of global warming predictions.

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