AIRS and Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide

In summary: Dessler.This is a major finding because it contradicts the idea that increasing levels of CO2 are the main cause of global warming. It shows that water vapor is a much more important player in the climate system than previously thought.
  • #1
joelupchurch
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http://airs.jpl.nasa.gov/AIRS_CO2_Data/AIRS_and_CO2/"

I'm not sure about the long term analysis will work out, but it looks to me like the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument is providing fundamental data about how our climate works.
 
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  • #2
joelupchurch said:
http://airs.jpl.nasa.gov/AIRS_CO2_Data/AIRS_and_CO2/"

I'm not sure about the long term analysis will work out, but it looks to me like the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument is providing fundamental data about how our climate works.

Let me just say... wow. Thanks for the link! This is going to make a major impact in all kinds of ways. The detail this is able to extract is remarkable. I have been browsing and I see all kinds of new details and features that may help resolve various outstanding puzzles and which bear upon various topics we've considered here.

Your link is going to new research which gives distributions of CO2 over the globe with a detail that I've never seen before; and which show up various features that have never been measured previously. This is likely to be an enormous help in sorting out the sources and sinks of the carbon cycle, which are at present subject to all kinds of unknowns.

And that only scratches the surface of what is available. There's a lot more than only the CO2 inferences; it looks at water vapour, temperature, pollution, air movement, etc, etc. This project has a home page: Atmospheric Infrared Sounder from which you can explore to get masses of data, detailed descriptions of how it works, FAQs, publications, and lists of the scientific impacts which cover a whole range of topics in weather and climate.

Cheers -- sylas
 
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  • #3
So what is the color scale and the range of the variation?
 
  • #4
Andre said:
So what is the color scale and the range of the variation?

Of CO2 variation described in the first link? There was a press release about this just recently: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2009-196&icid=%27MostViewHome%27 (JPL press release, December 15, 2009).

Some key features. CO2 is not uniformly distributed, but "lumpy". In particular there is a band of higher concentrations of CO2 in the Southern Hemisphere not previously seen. Here's a diagram, showing the scale.
411791main_slide5-AIRS-full.jpg
(Credit: C. Thompson/JPL/NASA)

There is also a page for obtaining the http://airs.jpl.nasa.gov/AIRS_CO2_Data/ .

Cheers -- sylas
 
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  • #5
The discrepence between the nothern and southern hemisphere seems to be unexpected. You would think this would affect the temperatures, currently whenever a difference in hemispheres is mentioned the ozone hole and more water in the southern hemisphere are taken as the main causes.
 
  • #6
dorlomin said:
The discrepence between the nothern and southern hemisphere seems to be unexpected. You would think this would affect the temperatures, currently whenever a difference in hemispheres is mentioned the ozone hole and more water in the southern hemisphere are taken as the main causes.

The difference between North and South in CO2 levels was already well known. What was not known was that band of higher concentrations circulating around latitude 30 S or so; or indeed other fine details in the distribution of CO2.

The major cause of temperature difference between North and South, however, is water. The oceans heat up much more slowly than the land, and there is a lot more ocean in the Southern hemisphere. The ozone hole may make a difference; but not nearly as much as the ocean. The difference in concentrations in CO2 is not enough to make a detectable difference for temperatures given all the other much larger local factors involved.

A difference of 2ppm is a forcing of less than 0.03 W/m2, which is pretty tiny.

The major relevance of this is likely to be, in my opinion, to help sort out details of the carbon cycle; which currently is not well known.

Cheers -- sylas
 
  • #7
From the http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2009-196"
In another major finding, scientists using AIRS data have removed most of the uncertainty about the role of water vapor in atmospheric models. The data are the strongest observational evidence to date for how water vapor responds to a warming climate.

"AIRS temperature and water vapor observations have corroborated climate model predictions that the warming of our climate produced as carbon dioxide levels rise will be greatly exacerbated -- in fact, more than doubled -- by water vapor," said Andrew Dessler, a climate scientist at Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas.

Dessler explained that most of the warming caused by carbon dioxide does not come directly from carbon dioxide, but from effects known as feedbacks. Water vapor is a particularly important feedback. As the climate warms, the atmosphere becomes more humid. Since water is a greenhouse gas, it serves as a powerful positive feedback to the climate system, amplifying the initial warming. AIRS measurements of water vapor reveal that water greatly amplifies warming caused by increased levels of carbon dioxide. Comparisons of AIRS data with models and re-analyses are in excellent agreement.

"The implication of these studies is that, should greenhouse gas emissions continue on their current course of increase, we are virtually certain to see Earth's climate warm by several degrees Celsius in the next century, unless some strong negative feedback mechanism emerges elsewhere in Earth's climate system," Dessler said.

Wonder what negative feedbacks might occur within the next century?

Looks like large emissions over the US and Europe are being swept towards towards the southeast by prevailing winds. Large concentration is pooling over Kazakhstan.
China emission are being swept more towards the northeast and pool off the coast of Canada. Argentina/Brazil and South Africa emission area also observable.
Australia, while high on per capita emissions basis looks to have small over all emissions.
Sink over Sibera makes sense because of all the tree, but can think of no reason for sink over Greenland.

Also looks like Maun Lau is in a slightly above average location while the Congo and Amazon are in the middle of a below average sink. There is a oddly high concentration along the equator in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
 
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FAQ: AIRS and Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide

1. What is AIRS?

AIRS stands for Atmospheric Infrared Sounder. It is an instrument on board NASA's Aqua satellite that measures Earth's atmospheric temperature, water vapor, and trace gases such as carbon dioxide.

2. How does AIRS measure atmospheric carbon dioxide?

AIRS uses a technique called remote sensing to measure the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. It measures the amount of infrared radiation emitted by the Earth's surface and atmosphere, which is affected by the presence of carbon dioxide.

3. Why is atmospheric carbon dioxide important?

Atmospheric carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas that traps heat in the Earth's atmosphere. It plays a major role in regulating the Earth's temperature and is essential for life on our planet. However, excessive amounts of carbon dioxide can contribute to global warming and climate change.

4. What have AIRS measurements shown about atmospheric carbon dioxide levels?

AIRS measurements have shown that atmospheric carbon dioxide levels have been steadily increasing over the past few decades, primarily due to human activities such as burning fossil fuels and deforestation. This increase in carbon dioxide is contributing to the Earth's warming trend.

5. How do AIRS measurements help scientists understand climate change?

AIRS measurements are used by scientists to track changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels and understand its role in climate change. This data helps inform climate models and predictions and can also be used to measure the effectiveness of carbon reduction efforts.

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