Publication | Open Access
No Impact of Anthropogenic Aerosols on Early 21st Century Global Temperature Trends in a Large Initial‐Condition Ensemble
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Citations
32
References
2018
Year
EngineeringAir QualityPacific Decadal OscillationClimate ModelingEarth System ScienceLarge Initial‐condition EnsembleEarth ScienceInitial Condition EnsembleRegional Climate ResponseAtmospheric ScienceClimate ProjectionClimate ChangeClimate VariabilityClimate SciencesAerosol FormationAnthropogenic AerosolsEarth's ClimateClimate DynamicsClimatologyAtmospheric Impact AssessmentDecadal Climate Responses
Abstract Anthropogenic‐aerosol (AA) radiative forcing modulates multidecadal greenhouse radiative forcing. However, decadal climate responses to AA are poorly characterized given AA forcing uncertainty and internal climate variability. This motivates revisiting a recent claim that AA drove a negative trend in the Pacific Decadal Oscillation and an associated cooling influence in the 10–15 years following the late‐1990's El Niño. The average of a 50‐member initial condition ensemble of the second generation Canadian Earth System Model version 2 that was forced only with AA does not exhibit the negative‐Pacific Decadal Oscillation/slowdown response. However, spurious responses of this kind, that are artifacts of subsetting the large ensemble (LE) in a manner consistent with published literature, can readily be found. This illustrates the caution needed in interpreting regional‐ and decadal‐scale responses to AA and suggests that improved characterization of model uncertainty in AA over the recent period is required.
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