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Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin
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Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Jan 17, 2018

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Greenland ice core proxy record for annual mean air temperature The real world (in blue) responds with fits and starts to continuous changes in solar forcing. ~25  C
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Page 1: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change

Presentation given to theGEO 302C

April 8, 2005

Charles JacksonInstitute for GeophysicsUT-Austin

Page 2: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Climate model (in black) responds smoothly to continuous changes in solar forcing over the past 165 thousand years.

Page 3: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Greenland ice core proxy record for annual mean air temperature

The real world (in blue) responds with fits and starts to continuous changes in solar forcing.

~25C

Page 4: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Climate model predictions of future climate

(Climate Change, IPCC 2001)

Page 5: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

(Climate Change, IPCC 2001)

Page 6: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

(Climate Change, IPCC 2001)

Page 7: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

abrupt climate change requires:

• A trigger• An amplifier• A source of persistence

Page 8: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.
Page 9: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.
Page 10: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Two complimentary theories

• Theory for ice sheet instability• Theory for the existence of two stable

steady states for the ocean’s meridional overturning circulation (the MOC)…also called the thermohaline circulation.

Page 11: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.
Page 12: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.
Page 13: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Binge-Purge Hypothesis

• Geothermal heating at the base of the Laurentide ice sheet caused a periodic collapse of the portion of ice above Hudson Bay.

• Ice bergs would flood the North Atlantic, depositing ice rafted debris and shutting down the ocean’s meridional overturning circulation

• Timing of 1) ice sheet recovery and 2) geothermal heat accumulation at ice base determine ~7 to 10 kyr time scale between events.

(MacAyeal 1993)

Page 14: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.
Page 15: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

A 3-box model of the MOC

Page 16: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Two stable solutions

Page 17: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Problem #1….

It would appear that there were multiple sources of ice rafted debris at the same time.

On short time scales, ice sheets are thought to be well insulated from changes in external forcing….so one would expect only a single source of ice rafted debris.

Page 18: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.
Page 19: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Problem #2: the global extent of D/O events

• D/O events are seen almost everywhere, however modeled response to MOC shutdown restricted to North Atlantic

• Only changes in CO2 are thought to affect global temperatures.

• Changes in tropics?...what is controling system memory?

Page 20: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Abrupt climate change events seen globally

(Lynch-Stieglitz, 2004 as compiled from Voelker, (2002) )

Page 21: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Greenland iceproxy for airtemperature

Indian OceanSpeleothem

proxy for Asian

monsoon

(Burns et al, 2003)

Page 22: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Climate Model Simulation of the Collapse of the Meridional Overturning Circulation in Atlantic

(Hadley Centre technical note 26, 2001)

Page 23: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

ENSO produces a wave-like pattern in temperature and precipitation.

Page 24: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Multiples of 1470-year spacing between events.

Problem #3…..unknown pace maker

•Standard deviation between interval spacing is only 2%•11-year sunspot cycle varies in period by +-14%•Closest known orbital cycle is a lunar cycle of 1,800 years.

Page 25: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Summary

• Relative to what is observed in nature, climate models seem unusually stable.

• There are many mysteries surrounding the cause and mechanisms of past abrupt climate change.

• Although future abrupt climate change is considered unlikely, model predictions of future climate may be under-representing the potential for such extreme events.

Page 26: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.
Page 27: Climate Physics and the Problem of Abrupt Climate Change Presentation given to the GEO 302C April 8, 2005 Charles Jackson Institute for Geophysics UT-Austin.

Afternoon Talks: 1:30 - 4:45 Applied Computational Engineering and Sciences Building - A.C.E.S.

Richard Alley (Penn State University)Big Ice Sheet Instability: Implications for Future Sea Level

Thomas Stocker (University of Bern, Switzerland)Irreversible Climate Transitions: Future Trouble?

Break

Philip Marcus (University of California, Berkeley)Prediction of Abrupt Change in Jupiter's Climate: An Analog for Earth?

    Reception - 5:00 - 6:30 A.C.E.S. Atrium

    Evening Talk: 7:00 - 8:00     Welch Hall Room 2.224

Lonnie Thompson (Ohio State University)Ice Adventures: Tracking Evidence of Abrupt Climate Change Across the Tropics