Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

CIRES/ATOC Special Seminar: Duo Chan, WHOI

Thursday April 6 2023 @ 2:00 pm

April

6

Thu

2023

2:00 pmMDT

Event Type
Seminar
Availability

Open to Public

Audience
  • CIRES employees
  • Science collaborators
  • Host
    CIRES, CU Boulder

    Combining Physical and Data-Driven Methods to Improve Historical Estimates of Earth Surface Temperatures
    Duo Chan, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    April 6th, 2pm
    Join in person at S228 SEEC or via Zoom.
    Instrumental measurements are crucial for quantifying historical changes, benchmarking models, and constraining predictions. For the climate community, we, however, still lack long and accurate climate records, even for the earth's surface temperatures since the late 19th century. In this talk, I will introduce recent progress in understanding historical temperature variability after combining physical knowledge and data-driven methods to improve the quality of observational estimates. Specifically, I will answer two questions. First, how much has the earth's surface warmed since the 1880s, and how far away are we from the 1.5°C warming target? Second, how do biases in the pattern of sea-surface temperatures prevent atmospheric models from accurately simulating recorded North Atlantic hurricane variability?
    Our improved temperature estimates outline a simpler and smoother warming pattern throughout the 20th century. They also open up new opportunities for further constraining climate sensitivity, attributing climate variations, understanding the dynamics of climate patterns, and improving models. I also hope this talk could provide perspectives on performing proper model-data comparisons. When model and data disagree, although models could be problematic, data are also noisy and sometimes biased reflections of reality. Being skeptical about data quality always appears to be a good practice.

    https://cuboulder.zoom.us/j/93695214465
    Meeting ID: 936 9521 4465
    Passcode: 962415