A state-dependent quantification of climate sensitivity based in paleo data of the last 2.1 million years

Publication date

2017-11

Authors

Köhler, Peter
Stap, L.B.ISNI 0000000407025577
von der Heydt, AnnaORCID 0000-0002-5557-3282ISNI 0000000395085782
de Boer, BasISNI 0000000395042096
van de Wal, Roderik S.W.ISNI 0000000388217396
Bloch-Johnson, Jonah

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

The evidence from both data and models indicates that specific equilibrium climate sensitivity S[X] — the global annual mean surface temperature change (DTg) as a response to a change in radiative forcing X (DR[X]) — is state-dependent. Such a state dependency implies that the best fit in the scatter plot of (DTg versus DR[X] is not a linear regression, but can be some non-linear or even non-smooth function. While for the conventional linear case the slope (gradient) of the regression is correctly interpreted as the specific equilibrium climate sensitivity S[X], the interpretation is not straightforward in the non-linear case. We here explain how such a state-dependent scatter plot needs to be interpreted, and provide a theoretical understanding — or generalization — how to quantify S[X] in the non-linear case. Finally, from data covering the last 2.1 Myr we show that — due to state dependency — the specific equilibrium climate sensitivity which considers radiative forcing of CO2 and land ice sheet (LI) albedo, S[CO2;LI], is larger during interglacial states than during glacial conditions by more than a factor two.

Keywords

climate sensitivity, Pleistocene

Citation

Köhler, P, Stap, L B, von der Heydt, A S, de Boer, B, van de Wal, R S W & Bloch-Johnson, J 2017, 'A state-dependent quantification of climate sensitivity based in paleo data of the last 2.1 million years', Paleoceanography, vol. 32, no. 11, pp. 1102-114. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017pa003190