Comment on: Akasofu, S.-I. On the Present Halting of Global Warming. Climate 2013, 1, 4–11

A recent article which has set forth new interpretations of Earth’s recent climate history has included some questions of authentic scientific inquiry, particularly related to the impact of ocean oscillations on atmospheric temperatures. In fact, this very issue is currently being investigated by mu...

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Main Authors: Dana A. Nuccitelli, John P. Abraham, Rasmus E. Benestad, Scott A. Mandia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-09-01
Series:Climate
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2225-1154/1/2/76
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spelling doaj-0a91de26355e49f6a07a0c2abd121da02020-11-25T01:35:08ZengMDPI AGClimate2225-11542013-09-0112768310.3390/cli1020076Comment on: Akasofu, S.-I. On the Present Halting of Global Warming. Climate 2013, 1, 4–11Dana A. NuccitelliJohn P. AbrahamRasmus E. BenestadScott A. MandiaA recent article which has set forth new interpretations of Earth’s recent climate history has included some questions of authentic scientific inquiry, particularly related to the impact of ocean oscillations on atmospheric temperatures. In fact, this very issue is currently being investigated by multiple research groups. On the other hand, the claim that a two-century linear temperature increase is a recovery from a recent cool period is not supported by the data. Furthermore, this thermal recovery hypothesis is not connected to any physical phenomenon; rather it is a result of a simplistic and incorrect curve-fitting operation. Other errors in the article are: the claim that the heating of the Earth has halted, misunderstanding of the relationship between carbon dioxide concentration and the resultant radiative forcing, and a failure to account for forcings other than carbon dioxide (such as other greenhouse gases, atmospheric aerosols, land use changes, etc.). Each of these errors brings serious question to the conclusions drawn in the referenced article. The simultaneous occurrence of all of these errors in a single study guarantees that its conclusions cannot be supported and, in fact, are demonstrably incorrect.http://www.mdpi.com/2225-1154/1/2/76global warmingclimate changecarbon dioxidegreenhouse gasesthermal recoverynatural climate fluctuationsocean oscillations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dana A. Nuccitelli
John P. Abraham
Rasmus E. Benestad
Scott A. Mandia
spellingShingle Dana A. Nuccitelli
John P. Abraham
Rasmus E. Benestad
Scott A. Mandia
Comment on: Akasofu, S.-I. On the Present Halting of Global Warming. Climate 2013, 1, 4–11
Climate
global warming
climate change
carbon dioxide
greenhouse gases
thermal recovery
natural climate fluctuations
ocean oscillations
author_facet Dana A. Nuccitelli
John P. Abraham
Rasmus E. Benestad
Scott A. Mandia
author_sort Dana A. Nuccitelli
title Comment on: Akasofu, S.-I. On the Present Halting of Global Warming. Climate 2013, 1, 4–11
title_short Comment on: Akasofu, S.-I. On the Present Halting of Global Warming. Climate 2013, 1, 4–11
title_full Comment on: Akasofu, S.-I. On the Present Halting of Global Warming. Climate 2013, 1, 4–11
title_fullStr Comment on: Akasofu, S.-I. On the Present Halting of Global Warming. Climate 2013, 1, 4–11
title_full_unstemmed Comment on: Akasofu, S.-I. On the Present Halting of Global Warming. Climate 2013, 1, 4–11
title_sort comment on: akasofu, s.-i. on the present halting of global warming. climate 2013, 1, 4–11
publisher MDPI AG
series Climate
issn 2225-1154
publishDate 2013-09-01
description A recent article which has set forth new interpretations of Earth’s recent climate history has included some questions of authentic scientific inquiry, particularly related to the impact of ocean oscillations on atmospheric temperatures. In fact, this very issue is currently being investigated by multiple research groups. On the other hand, the claim that a two-century linear temperature increase is a recovery from a recent cool period is not supported by the data. Furthermore, this thermal recovery hypothesis is not connected to any physical phenomenon; rather it is a result of a simplistic and incorrect curve-fitting operation. Other errors in the article are: the claim that the heating of the Earth has halted, misunderstanding of the relationship between carbon dioxide concentration and the resultant radiative forcing, and a failure to account for forcings other than carbon dioxide (such as other greenhouse gases, atmospheric aerosols, land use changes, etc.). Each of these errors brings serious question to the conclusions drawn in the referenced article. The simultaneous occurrence of all of these errors in a single study guarantees that its conclusions cannot be supported and, in fact, are demonstrably incorrect.
topic global warming
climate change
carbon dioxide
greenhouse gases
thermal recovery
natural climate fluctuations
ocean oscillations
url http://www.mdpi.com/2225-1154/1/2/76
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