Publication | Closed Access
Influence of Satellite Data Uncertainties on the Detection of Externally Forced Climate Change
81
Citations
23
References
2003
Year
Climate SciencesEarth ObservationClimatologyMeteorologySatellite Data UncertaintiesEngineeringAtmospheric ScienceModel PredictionsGeographyRemote SensingData UncertaintiesEarth Observation DataGlobal Warming PotentialEarth ScienceClimate Change
Two independent analyses of the same satellite-based radiative emissions data yield tropospheric temperature trends that differ by 0.1 degrees C per decade over 1979 to 2001. The troposphere warms appreciably in one satellite data set, while the other data set shows little overall change. These satellite data uncertainties are important in studies seeking to identify human effects on climate. A model-predicted "fingerprint" of combined anthropogenic and natural effects is statistically detectable only in the satellite data set with a warming troposphere. Our findings show that claimed inconsistencies between model predictions and satellite tropospheric temperature data (and between the latter and surface data) may be an artifact of data uncertainties.
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