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Discussion > Sense and Sensitivity, part two.

It's a simple enough question, yet I go on threads where climate scientists of both persuasions are present and I can't get an answer. If it's a stupid question, tell me, I can bear it.

I just got snipped for off topic on the Ed Hawkins/ Nic Lewis thread. Fair enough, it was O/T. But why can folks who write papers about ECS and TCR not justify the concepts? That a given percentage change in CO2 concentration MUST give a certain response in global mean temperature regardless of start point. Where is that established? What paper can I read which will explain it?


If it isn't real thing, it's pointless to debate its value. Or use it to predict future temperatures. To produce results which are massively dependent on which assumptions you use or which observational temp series you pick.

So tell me the answer. Don't tell me I shouldn't ask.

Mar 19, 2014 at 5:33 PM | Registered Commenterrhoda

rhoda
I was all set to back you up, especially in the face of Richard Drake's telling you to shut up, when you got binned. So came here hoping I'd find you!
I'm not qualified to comment on either ECS or TCR but like you I have been mildly frustrated at the "Don't mention the TCR" attitude (goes along with "Don't mention back-radiation"!)
As you say, if ECS and TCR are merely constructs then we are in truth discussing the colour of the emperor's new clothes.
So will someone please point us in the direction of the evidence that these are known, recognised (and recognisable) valid parts of the global warming process rather than just one more tweak in the computer models.

Mar 19, 2014 at 5:58 PM | Registered CommenterMike Jackson

Rhoda - have you read Clive Best's blogposts on the subject? Basically his point is that sensitivity as defined is a model construct that cannot be measured. And he suggests changing the definition so that it can be measured empirically and gives his calculation.

http://clivebest.com/blog/?p=5746 , plus later posts where he calculates TCR and ECS empirically

Mar 19, 2014 at 7:12 PM | Unregistered Commenterdiogenes

I didn't tell Rhoda to shut up Mike. Please restate what I said, to my own satisfaction. For if you are wanting to pass on the meaning of something snipped (and I was delighted to be snipped, because it seemed to be a straw in the wind that there will be a touch heavier moderation in operation on Bishop Hill) then I should be totally happy with how you represent what I said. You can then disagree with it of course.

I am under the impression that you feel that it's fine to traduce Richard Drake, because you don't like some things I say. So what exactly did I say? I'd decided I wasn't going to raise it myself, in the new context, but, given that you have, what did I say? Please explain. Or, to save time, you can simply say sorry that you have misrepresented me.

One of the reasons this matters to me is that I was drawing an analogy that could have been taken as particularly positive about Rhoda and Martin A's endeavours on sensitivity. The Bish didn't want even the beginnings of that discussion on the Lewis-Hawkins, which I totally respect, but I resent you giving a summary that is almost opposite to what I actually did say.

Mar 19, 2014 at 7:16 PM | Registered CommenterRichard Drake

No problem with the snippage, that was fair enough if we have Hawkins and Lewis laying out their respective positions. I'm sure it's very interesting, but to me it is a very small difference in estimated CS dependent on choice of numerous inputs and assumptions. If the whole thing is duff though, ruined by natural variation and emergent phenomena, their arguments are of no import at all. That's why I want the question answered, and those guys and others like them don't come here much.

Unless of course the question is being avoided intentionally. In which case I think I know the answer..

Mar 19, 2014 at 7:53 PM | Registered Commenterrhoda

I find the ins and outs of climate sensitivity too complicated to understand but I realise that the current debate of how to interpret thermometer data has to be a step in the right direction. Using proxy data where they get wildly differing values depending upon which geological era they look at indictes there was a lot more going on during those periods than CO2. How they expect to extract useful data without knowing all the other variables is beyond me.

So it's a good thing they're settling down to chew over modern data. I assume each year adds more clarity.

What bemuses me is how they think we can react to AGW if we don't know whether it will be so low as to be beneficial or so high it would probably be disasterous. Officially they may have ruled out the super high values but the climatati are happier letting high sensitivity values slide in the media than even the low end of the official IPCC range.

Mar 19, 2014 at 8:24 PM | Unregistered CommenterTinyCO2

Several times, I have commented that ECS seems to be part of climate science that even sceptics accept as valid. But there do now seem to be some sceptics that have doubts about it.

The idea of estimating ECS or TCS seems to me to involve taking a lot of existing climate science notions as valid and having real existence.

Bearing in mind that we are dealing with an immensely complex nonlinear system, possibly simultaneaously exhibiting chaotic behaviour on multiple timescales, with a range of stochastic inputs, the idea that a doubling of CO2 will produce a single-valued increase in global average temperature, capable of being calculated, and capable of being observed, seems itself an iffy assumption.

TCS (so far as I understand the notion and the methods for estimating it) seems to involve a whole lot additional implicit assumptions about the dynamic behaviour of the climate system being understood. So far as I can see, the dynamics of the climate system are very far from being something that is well understood.

I started working my way through the Lewis/Crok paper, noting things that seemed to me to be assumptions or acceptance of existing climate science notions as established fact, in preparation for looking in greater detail at each point. I got sidetracked, but now I must get back to the task.

My impression so far (and nothing more than an impression) is recent ECS calculations are not involved in overthrowing climate science. They are more involved in taking climate science as it is and redoing some of the existing bits, with better attention to some of the details. Is that a viewpoint that others hold?

Mar 19, 2014 at 8:25 PM | Registered CommenterMartin A

Yes.

Mar 19, 2014 at 8:31 PM | Registered Commenterrhoda

sorry Rhoida and Martin A....Clive Best has already chased down that rabbit hole....but feel free to ignore me

Mar 19, 2014 at 10:01 PM | Unregistered Commenterdiogenes

Diogenes, Best seems to be coming at it from a different angle which assumes there is a figure, a meaningful figure, for TCR and ECS. In other words, accept all the premises and then discuss the limits of measurment and estimation of the number. This bypasses any validation of the concept itself. You accept the concept and you play the forcings game to get a number which you may say is the CS but in fact is the sum of the unknowns for any set of assumptions and selected temp dataset. That isn't what I mean, and it may be that what I am really asking about is the blind acceptance of ceteris paribus. You must know very well that ceteris will not be paribus over a century. Not in a complex chaotic system.

Mar 19, 2014 at 10:31 PM | Registered Commenterrhoda

I'm one of those, probably like Martin A, who often points out that TCR or ECR are abstracts from the models.

The translation of this is:

Climate Sensitivity=
"Our model says that if CO2 goes up by x, then temperature will go up by y."
It doesn't seem so complex when you descibe it that way, does it?

The advanced interpretation is that x and y are small increments such that it tells you the slope on the curve. But that is still just the output of the computer model. Climate sensitivity is not some special new variable that you can claim to measure with a new satellite or another device that does consist of
a) A thermometer and
b) A clock.

Once this is realised, the jaundiced will also realise that "climate sensitivity" can be a useful 'framing' ruse, in that you appear, perhaps unwittingly, to be accepting precepts that that the modeller may not wish to see debated.

Mar 19, 2014 at 11:11 PM | Unregistered Commentermichael hart

that should be:
"a new satellite or another device that does NOT consist of
a) A thermometer and
b) A clock."

Mar 19, 2014 at 11:31 PM | Unregistered Commentermichael hart

I would be interesting to know who first "invented" the concept of TCR and ECS and when.
And also why.
If either is a reliable guide to what the temperature, and therefore the climate, is going to do over the next century then that would be important. It's the deathly silence or the handwaving when anyone outside the climate community asks the question that makes me suspicious.

Richard Drake
If memory serves, the phrase you used to rhoda was "give it a rest" which in my book is as close to 'shut up' as makes no difference.
As for the rest of that post, what are you on about? I've said nothing about snipping or about heavy-handed moderation about which I have no problem since this is Andrew's blog, not mine. (Though I'm sure he'll be delighted to know that he has your approval!)
I simply agreed with rhoda's point which Andrew deemed inappropriate for the way he wants that thread to develop. So rhoda brought the discussion here as I hoped she would.
Stop being so touchy.

Mar 20, 2014 at 8:59 AM | Registered CommenterMike Jackson

Mike, thank you for the response. While you're here, would you mind looking back to January where Martin A found conclusive proof you were wrong about Lord Deben, and you never acknowledged it. (You must have missed my reminder two days later.)

It's quite true that I suggested to Rhoda, after they - using the plural for reasons of delicacy - had already had two goes at the subject, to give it a rest. I also suggested they should have linked to the best treatment of the issue they felt they had out here in BH discussion land, in a single sentence, which would have caused less disruption to the Lewis-Hawkins thread and would surely have been more conducive to their point of view being assessed by interested others. So to that extent, yes, I was suggesting a reduced input from Rhoda would have been better on that particular thread - but with a view to their (and Martin A's) view being available to others at the click of a link. That to me wasn't saying 'shut up'.

And then I was far more encouraging than that. Did you read the next and longer part? Did you understand the implications for the relationship I was at least suggesting between conventional thinking on sensitivity and more radical views?

I'm not inclined to spell this all out again after your disparaging reference - until you at least convince me that you did read and understood what I was saying. Thanks.

Mar 20, 2014 at 9:18 AM | Registered CommenterRichard Drake

I would be interesting to know who first "invented" the concept of TCR and ECS and when.
And also why.
Mike Jackson

The following is in my folder of 'stuff to be looked at when I get round to it'

The concept of climate sensitivity: history and development Natalia Andronova, Michael Schlesinger, Suraje Dessai, Mike Hulme and Bin Li

ECS seems a pretty obvious rough and ready answer to the question "if atmos CO2 is increased, what will that do to temperatures in the long run'.

TCS seems to me a far more dodgy concept for a number of reasons. I too would be interested to know the rationale for the TCS. I imagine that trawling through the IPCC reports would throw something up about its origin.

Mar 20, 2014 at 9:30 AM | Registered CommenterMartin A

Martin A
Thanks for that link. I'll make time to have a look though I suspect I won't understand much more than a quarter of it!
I find myself more and more wondering about the whole question of sensitivity and the putative effects of CO2 especially the idea that if a doubling of the volume in the atmosphere will lead to certain results whether there is any evidence to date that we are x% towards seeing those results always bearing in mind that the start date never seems to be a constant and that the effect is supposedly logarithmic.
I keep having these visions of constantly moving goalposts.

Richard Drake
I have no intention of helping you to derail rhoda's discussion. If you want to berate me further start a discussion thread of your own. Just don't expect me to join you there.

Mar 20, 2014 at 1:12 PM | Registered CommenterMike Jackson

Mike Jackson - I took a very quick look.

It's climate science nerd porn but probably not the place to look to quick an illuminating answers to your questions. Like much of climate science literature, reading it is rather heavy going, despite the notions involved being simple.

Mar 20, 2014 at 2:50 PM | Registered CommenterMartin A

Mike: Superb answer. You have faced up to your public defamation of Deben in the most manly way possible. I am in awe. When did you know you had to do it? Anyway, such details can only, as you say, disrupt this thread. Respect, man, respect. This is why one loves climate blogs so much.

Mar 20, 2014 at 4:11 PM | Registered CommenterRichard Drake

I read Martin's link. It still seemed to take ECS as a given. It traced it back to Arrhenius. Did he really state it that way? Did he have an idea of global average temp, or did he frame it in terns of watts/ sq m? Did he support it over multiple doublings?

Now, I can see that it might be a tool you could use to compare model outputs with each other or with observations. How that leads to a number which can plug in to a formula to predict future changes over even one doubling I cannot see.

A model is a model. You run it to provide projections based on various scenarios. If you want to simulate a doubling, plug that into the model. What you can't do is run a model for a given period, extract a CS figure and then use that to plug in to a simple formula for predictions. It just is not valid to do so. But didn't I see Richard Betts doing just that in the first response to the Lewis/Crok estimate?

Mar 20, 2014 at 5:50 PM | Registered Commenterrhoda

"By means of these values, I have calculated the mean alteration of temperature that would follow if the quantity of carbonic acid varied from its present mean value (K=1) to another, viz. to K=0.67, 1.5, 2, 2.5, and 3 respectively. This calculation is made for every tenth parallel, and separately for the four seasons of the year. The variation is given in Table VII."

The temperature variations given in Table VII, for K=2 (ie doubling), range from 4.9° to 6.1°.

On the Influence of Carbonic Acid n the Air upon the Temperature of the Ground, Svante Arrhenius, Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science , Series 5, Volume 41, April 1896, pages 237-276.

Mar 20, 2014 at 6:26 PM | Registered CommenterMartin A

The whole idea of climate sensitivity revolves around the notion that if the the climate warms then inevitably there will be consequences like melting snow and ice and increased water vapour caused by the increased temperature.The melting snow and ice would mean less albedo and hence were a positive feedback whereas water vapour would provide clouds which are a both a positive and negative feedback. It has a ring of truth about it, but as rhoda points out is it in fact true? Is it in fact that same as your Mum's admonition not to go out in cold weather with your hair wet because "You'll catch your death of cold."? Plausible but not backed up by the observations.

Arrehenius seems to have been the progenitor of this idea in his 1896 paper in which he proposed an ECS of 5-6C. In a, now unfashionable, climate science discussion Angstrom argued that the absorption rate for CO2 used by Arrehnius was too high, which Arrhenius dismissed in 1900, but by 1906 produced a paper accepting that the "science wasn't settled" in 1906 and revised his forecasts down to 2.1C. As far as I can make out this is where it all started, but is it true? Will there be positive feedbacks through increased water vapour?

For my part I'm firmly in the "don't know" camp, it is persuasive that there will be an increase in water vapour, but from what I've read around the subject no one has any realistic notion of how the clouds will behave in terms of absorption of outgoing absorption of radiation or albedo for incoming radiation - which, from memory, clouds account for around 79 Watt/m^2. More water vapour means more clouds which if they increased by say 10%, and the relationship between clouds and their albedo effect is linear, would mean a reduction of around 8W/m^2 in the incoming radiation - which looks like a pretty large negative feedback to me.

The other problem I have is the intractability of the climate sensitivity numbers to research. The range used by the IPCC has remained pretty well within the educated guess made by the Charney Report based on the Manabe (2C ECS) and Hansen (4C, no surprise there, ECS) models of 1.5C (subtracting 0.5C from Manabe) to 4C (adding 0.5C to Hansen) with a probable ECS of 3C (the middle number no less!). That they correctly defined numbers by guessing the range from two models has to be highly improbable, but the work of thousands of climate scientists over the 34 years from the Charney Report through to AR5 hasn't dented this number, except that in AR5 they can't agree what the most likely ECS.

So here's my problem. It is difficult to see how people paid to know these things all accept ECS and are all wrong. That isn't very likely and it is unlikely to the point of impossibility I'm having insights that the scientists wouldn't have considered themselves and have easily understandable answers to. I just can't find them.

A further problem for me is that if the climate sensitivity is indeed 3C and temperature rose naturally by 1C in the past why didn't the climate system produce water vapour then? The water doesn't know where the heat comes
from before producing the water vapour does it? So, where in the paleoclimate records are there rises of 1C followed by rises of 3C and melting of the icecaps?

And finally another piece of climate science ignorance I'd like to be relieved of is this:

Heat ------->water vapour--------->more heat-------->must give more water vapour------->must give more heat.....

What stabilises the climate once we get into that cycle?

Mar 21, 2014 at 12:04 PM | Unregistered Commentergeronimo

So here's my problem. It is difficult to see how people paid to know these things all accept ECS and are all wrong. That isn't very likely and it is unlikely to the point of impossibility

Ten years ago I'd have said the same thing.

But the evidence says to me that the unlikely to the point of impossibility has happened. Groupthink. Call it what you want. If you have the chief scientist of the Met Office saying that GCMs predict future climate, what more evidence do you need of the collective delusion?

What stabilises the climate once we get into that cycle?

Loop gain < 1.0, so that +ve feedback amplifies but by a finite factor.

Mar 21, 2014 at 12:21 PM | Registered CommenterMartin A

Positive feedback:

Heat ------->water vapour--------->more heat-------->must give more water vapour------->must give more heat.....

geronimo

Or, for all anyone knows (it seems), in the case of negative feedback,...

More heat ------->more water vapour--------->more cloud--------->more sunlight reflected back to space--------->less heat-------->new balance not much different from before.


Or, again, so far as anyone knows (it seems), in the case of simultaneous positve and negative feedback which just happen to balance....

More heat------->more water vapour ----->more greenhouse effect + more sunlight reflected back to space---->no change at all.

Mar 21, 2014 at 2:58 PM | Registered CommenterMartin A

Rhoda,

My take and therefore entirely off-the-wall is that Nic L's approach is consistent with others based on energy balance. The theory is that there is a net input of energy into the system and the imbalance will represent CO2 warming and feedbacks. The actual measurement of the imbalance is being attempted at the top of atmosphere by satellites (3) but by measurement of OHC etc by Nic L. As Martin A has pointed out on other threads, the calibration of the satellites requires adjustment but its actual accuracy is good (declared by Willis E!). The adjustment applied is from modelled expectations. Its measurements over time show no trend.

Now if there was a trend upward then that could be seen to match the upward trend of CO2 and warming. It follows that if the trend were down then that could be construed as cooling while CO2 increases. Now, between those two, a zero trend, to my logic, would suggest nothing is happening and if so, the imbalance is actually zero. That would match the temperature trend over the satellite period but not the CO2 trend.

My conclusion from that is that the theory is wrong and that the satellite adjustment is made to match the theory and not the observations. (This, of course, leads to a search for 'missing heat'.) Now, if nothing is happening, TCR is 1 (its a multiplier). Currently, TCR calculations are trending to 1.

But I am unsure if I am right and expect someone can blow a hole in this.

Mar 21, 2014 at 6:49 PM | Unregistered Commenterssat

Mar 21, 2014 at 2:58 PM | Registered Commenter Martin A

I had intended to write a discussion piece on sensitivity based on rhoda's questions on one of the blogs, can't remember which one, but I had to spend some time in Paris and have only just got back. (I had intended to call it Sense and Sensitivity - 2 no sense in re-inventing a perfect wheel!). One of the posts on the blog, I believe by "not yet banned" tried to explain TCR and ECS by analogy to a boiling kettle. In the post nyb suggested putting heat under a kettle of water would cause the temperature of the water to increase and that the pre-boiling point of the kettle was TCR while ECS was the boiling point.

I disagree with this analogy because actually we know that the "natural" temperature increase without positive feedbacks is 1.2C from the S-B equation, so what the climate scientists are saying is that the water will go above 100C because of positive feedbacks. The only way I could conceive of the kettle having positive feedbacks was if the spout was blocked and the lid sealed, when the increased pressure would allow the temperature to rise above 100C.

I more inclined to believe your last post as being the most likely case, and that an increase in (temporarily) retained heat will increase cloud cover which already reflects 80w/m^2 out of 340W/m^2 and will cool the earth. But what do I know against the mass of clisci opinion? Nothing.

This brought me back to rhoda's and Martin A's position and led me to ask myself, do the climate scientists really believe that the climate system is a 5 billion year old kettle with a blocked spout and a sealed lid? How likely is that?

Thanks for setting me straight on the loop gain issue, I should know these things.

Mar 22, 2014 at 9:32 AM | Unregistered Commentergeronimo