Abstract
Abstract. Future climate change projections, impacts, and mitigation targets are directly affected by how sensitive Earth's global mean surface temperature is
to anthropogenic forcing, expressed via the climate sensitivity (S) and transient climate response (TCR). However, the S and TCR are poorly
constrained, in part because historic observations and future climate projections consider the climate system under different response timescales
with potentially different climate feedback strengths. Here, we evaluate S and TCR by using historic observations of surface warming, available since the
mid-19th century, and ocean heat uptake, available since the mid-20th century, to constrain a model with independent climate feedback components acting
over multiple response timescales. Adopting a Bayesian approach, our prior uses a constrained distribution for the instantaneous Planck feedback
combined with wide-ranging uniform distributions of the strengths of the fast feedbacks (acting over several days) and multi-decadal feedbacks. We
extract posterior distributions by applying likelihood functions derived from different combinations of observational datasets. The resulting TCR
distributions when using two preferred combinations of historic datasets both find a TCR of 1.5 (1.3 to 1.8 at 5–95 %
range) ∘C. We find the posterior probability distribution for S for our preferred dataset combination evolves from S of 2.0 (1.6
to 2.5) ∘C on a 20-year response timescale to S of 2.3 (1.4 to 6.4) ∘C on a 140-year response
timescale, due to the impact of multi-decadal feedbacks. Our results demonstrate how multi-decadal feedbacks allow a significantly higher upper bound
on S than historic observations are otherwise consistent with.
Funder
UK Research and Innovation
Horizon 2020
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献