Cloud 'feedback'
affects global climate and warming
Warming due to increases in greenhouse gases will cause clouds to
trap more heat, which will lead to additional warming says Andrew
Dessler, a professor in the Department of Atmospheric Sciences. This
process is known as the "cloud feedback" and is predicted to be
responsible for a significant portion of the warming over the next
century.
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Dessler used measurements from the Clouds and the Earth's Radiant
Energy System (CERES) instrument onboard NASA's Terra satellite to
calculate the amount of energy trapped by clouds as the climate varied
over the last decade. He also used meteorological analyses provided by
NASA's Modern Era Retrospective-Analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA)
and by the European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts.
"It's a vicious cycle - warmer temperatures mean clouds trap more
heat, which in turn leads to even more warming," Dessler explains. His
work was published in the December 10 issue of Science magazine and is
supported by a NASA research grant.
While climate models had long predicted that the cloud feedback would
amplify warming from human activities, until recently it was impossible
to test the models using observations."This work suggests that climate
models are doing a pretty decent job simulating how clouds respond to
changing climates," Dessler says.
Some prominent climate skeptics have recently been arguing that
clouds would act to stabilise the climate, thereby preventing greenhouse
gases from causing significant warming.
"Based on my results, I think the chances that clouds will save us
from dramatic climate change are pretty low," he explains. "In fact, my
work shows that clouds will likely be amplifying the warming from human
activities.
"I think we can be pretty confident that temperatures will rise by
several degrees Celsius over the next century if we continue our present
trajectory of greenhouse gas emissions."
- Courtesy: Science Daily |