This simple visual analogy that Ron House has designed can help readers not familiar with a contentious atmospheric modeling issue get a primer on the it. While not a perfect analogy (and by definition analogies often aren’t) it does help convey an important point: the predicted red spot has not appeared. For the more technically inclined, or for those wanting more, Steve McIntyre posted an interesting discussion at Climate Audit. – Anthony

Guest Post by Ron House July 29, 2009
Let’s say it’s a cold night and Fred climbs into bed:
(A) Fred in bed.
Will Fred use a blanket to keep warm? If so, the air will heat up close to Fred because his body warms the air and the blanket prevents it from moving away. On the other hand, as the night progresses, the air beyond the blanket will cool:
(B) With a blanket, the warm air collecting around Fred warms him up.
In the picture, the “+” signs show air that becomes warmer, and the “-” signs air that becomes cooler.
Now what if Fred (forgetful Fred) didn’t use a blanket? The warm air escapes and tends to rise (warm air being less dense than cold air):
(C) With no blanket, warm air escapes and Fred shivers.
Poor Fred gets colder as the night wears on. But now we come to the point of the exercise: How do we know whether Fred used, or did not use, a blanket?
“Easy,” you say: “Take a look!” But let’s suppose that Fred is a very light sleeper, we dare not put on the light, so there’s no way we can see if there’s a blanket. But—surprise!—we just happen to have an infra-red scanner that can tell us the temperature of the air at various spots throughout the room. Depending on whether Fred uses a blanket, the temperature change in the room follows one of the two characteristic patterns we saw above; so if we check where the air gets colder and where it gets warmer as the night wears on, we know, for a fact, whether or not Fred used a blanket, even without being able to see it. If Fred did use a blanket, our scanner should show results like this (note how we can’t see the blanket, but we can be sure that it is there):
(D) Warm air collects in a contained region, so there must be a blanket.
On the other hand, if he does not use a blanket, we will see the temperature change in a pattern something like this:
(E) Warm air escapes upwards, so we are sure there is no blanket.
Once again, there is no doubt at all what is going on. In science, nothing is absolutely certain, but depending on which temperature pattern develops, we can be very, very sure indeed of the answer to the question: Did Fred use a blanket?
Now we can turn to the global warming question, whether the Earth is surrounded by a ‘blanket’ of anthropogenic (human-generated) greenhouse gas stoking up the temperature of the planet. The physics of a real blanket (as with Fred in the fable above) and a gaseous ‘blanket’ around the Earth differ, but just the same, different heat dissipation (or retention) processes will result in different characteristic patterns of temperature change. Just as Fred will be surrounded by something roughly resembling one of two quite different patterns of air temperatures, so likewise will temperature changes around the Earth have a quite definite pattern, depending on which climate theory is right. Scientists whose paycheck does not depend on agreeing with global warming alarmism will all agree with this simple statement. It’s part of the basic skill of having a ‘nose’ for physics.
What, then, are our main competing climate theories? The IPCC’s reports are based on results from a collection of climate computer models; they have nothing else. These are simply computer programs that, in essence, contain a computerised version of the assumptions and beliefs of the climate modeller as to how the climate of the planet works. Whether these assumptions are well-founded is another question, but the key point is that whatever these assumptions may be, when the climate model is run, it generates its ‘predictions’ by calculation of hypothetical futures for the behaviour of the atmosphere. These ‘futures’ contain, as an essential element, predictions of the changes of atmospheric temperatures at various heights above the planet and the various latitudes all the way from south pole to north pole.
The indisputable fact about these atmospheric temperature predictions is that if the pattern doesn’t happen, the model is wrong. Just as Fred won’t warm up if he isn’t surrounded by warm air, likewise the effects on the Earth of global warming cannot happen if the cause of the warming —the warm air—isn’t there.
So now we come to the graphs that clinch the matter. All global warming models predict some sort of developing ‘hotspot’ in the atmosphere above the tropics. Here is the graph for one of the models, but they all look roughly similar:
(F) Model predicts air above the tropics heats up. from the NIPCC Report p. 107
This picture shows the air from 75 degrees north to 75 degrees south (the equator in the middle) and up to 30 km above the Earth. We can think of this air pattern as corresponding to the pattern in Fred’s bedroom when Fred used a blanket: although the actual mechanism is different, something is ‘keeping the heat in’, so to speak. Just as we did with Fred in bed, we can compare reality with this picture. Is the heat in the real atmosphere doing what the model predicts? Here is the temperature trend in the real world:
(G) Real world trend develops no hotspot. from the NIPCC Report p. 106
What have we actually proved here? Well, proved, without possibility of error, nothing, of course: no question at all about the real world ever has a complete perfect proof as an answer, so don’t be misled if someone says the world still might be heating due to CO2 despite the absence of the warm spot that is supposed to do the warming. Of course anything might be happening; but how likely is it? Well how likely is it that Fred has a blanket, but the air around him is getting colder just as if he had no blanket, and yet Fred is warming up despite that? The two questions have the same answer: not very.
Yet surprisingly, some proponents of global warming alarmism actually resort to this very strategy. “True,” they say, “the hot spot isn’t developing. But that is because the heat is being stored up elsewhere—it’s “in the pipeline”—and one day it will burst forth with even greater severity and vengeance.”
What can we make of that claim? Well, thinking back to Fred again, it amounts to this: We use our temperature probe in Fred’s darkened bedroom and we see a pattern like that in (E) above, corresponding to no blanket: Fred should be freezing! But actually, the heat has all gone into Fred’s body, despite the complete absence of the hot air which is the mechanism for making it do so. In other words, Fred got warmer by disobeying the second law of thermodynamics—in other words, by magic. Likewise, if someone says heat is being secretly stored somewhere by global warming, despite the absence of the very mechanism that does the warming, they are saying global warming is happening by magic. That is the harsh truth of the matter.
One thing I have learned whilst studying the global warming question is that, like many other physical systems, the climate is constrained by limits that can be understood by any intelligent person willing to learn some simple physics. The ‘hotspot’ is one of them. Anyone talking down to you and telling you you have to take the word of some mythical ‘consensus’ of ‘experts’ is trying to hoodwink you.
Let’s say it’s a cold night and Fred climbs into bed:
(A) Fred in bed.
Will Fred use a blanket to keep warm? If so, the air will heat up close to Fred because his body warms the air and the blanket prevents it from moving away. On the other hand, as the night progresses, the air beyond the blanket will cool:
(B) With a blanket, the warm air collecting around Fred warms him up.
In the picture, the “+” signs show air that becomes warmer, and the “-” signs air that becomes cooler.
Now what if Fred (forgetful Fred) didn’t use a blanket? The warm air escapes and tends to rise (warm air being less dense than cold air):
(C) With no blanket, warm air escapes and Fred shivers.
Poor Fred gets colder as the night wears on. But now we come to the point of the exercise: How do we know whether Fred used, or did not use, a blanket?
“Easy,” you say: “Take a look!” But let’s suppose that Fred is a very light sleeper, we dare not put on the light, so there’s no way we can see if there’s a blanket. But—surprise!—we just happen to have an infra-red scanner that can tell us the temperature of the air at various spots throughout the room. Depending on whether Fred uses a blanket, the temperature change in the room follows one of the two characteristic patterns we saw above; so if we check where the air gets colder and where it gets warmer as the night wears on, we know, for a fact, whether or not Fred used a blanket, even without being able to see it. If Fred did use a blanket, our scanner should show results like this (note how we can’t see the blanket, but we can be sure that it is there):
(D) Warm air collects in a contained region, so there must be a blanket.
On the other hand, if he does not use a blanket, we will see the temperature change in a pattern something like this:
(E) Warm air escapes upwards, so we are sure there is no blanket.
Once again, there is no doubt at all what is going on. In science, nothing is absolutely certain, but depending on which temperature pattern develops, we can be very, very sure indeed of the answer to the question: Did Fred use a blanket?
Now we can turn to the global warming question, whether the Earth is surrounded by a ‘blanket’ of anthropogenic (human-generated) greenhouse gas stoking up the temperature of the planet. The physics of a real blanket (as with Fred in the fable above) and a gaseous ‘blanket’ around the Earth differ, but just the same, different heat dissipation (or retention) processes will result in different characteristic patterns of temperature change. Just as Fred will be surrounded by something roughly resembling one of two quite different patterns of air temperatures, so likewise will temperature changes around the Earth have a quite definite pattern, depending on which climate theory is right. Scientists whose paycheck does not depend on agreeing with global warming alarmism will all agree with this simple statement. It’s part of the basic skill of having a ‘nose’ for physics.
What, then, are our main competing climate theories? The IPCC’s reports are based on results from a collection of climate computer models; they have nothing else. These are simply computer programs that, in essence, contain a computerised version of the assumptions and beliefs of the climate modeller as to how the climate of the planet works. Whether these assumptions are well-founded is another question, but the key point is that whatever these assumptions may be, when the climate model is run, it generates its ‘predictions’ by calculation of hypothetical futures for the behaviour of the atmosphere. These ‘futures’ contain, as an essential element, predictions of the changes of atmospheric temperatures at various heights above the planet and the various latitudes all the way from south pole to north pole.
The indisputable fact about these atmospheric temperature predictions is that if the pattern doesn’t happen, the model is wrong. Just as Fred won’t warm up if he isn’t surrounded by warm air, likewise the effects on the Earth of global warming cannot happen if the cause of the warming —the warm air—isn’t there.
So now we come to the graphs that clinch the matter. All global warming models predict some sort of developing ‘hotspot’ in the atmosphere above the tropics. Here is the graph for one of the models, but they all look roughly similar:
(F) Model predicts air above the tropics heats up. from the NIPCC Report p. 107
This picture shows the air from 75 degrees north to 75 degrees south (the equator in the middle) and up to 30 km above the Earth. We can think of this air pattern as corresponding to the pattern in Fred’s bedroom when Fred used a blanket: although the actual mechanism is different, something is ‘keeping the heat in’, so to speak. Just as we did with Fred in bed, we can compare reality with this picture. Is the heat in the real atmosphere doing what the model predicts? Here is the temperature trend in the real world:
(G) Real world trend develops no hotspot. from the NIPCC Report p. 106
What have we actually proved here? Well, proved, without possibility of error, nothing, of course: no question at all about the real world ever has a complete perfect proof as an answer, so don’t be misled if someone says the world still might be heating due to CO2 despite the absence of the warm spot that is supposed to do the warming. Of course anything might be happening; but how likely is it? Well how likely is it that Fred has a blanket, but the air around him is getting colder just as if he had no blanket, and yet Fred is warming up despite that? The two questions have the same answer: not very.
Yet surprisingly, some proponents of global warming alarmism actually resort to this very strategy. “True,” they say, “the hot spot isn’t developing. But that is because the heat is being stored up elsewhere—it’s “in the pipeline”—and one day it will burst forth with even greater severity and vengeance.”
What can we make of that claim? Well, thinking back to Fred again, it amounts to this: We use our temperature probe in Fred’s darkened bedroom and we see a pattern like that in (E) above, corresponding to no blanket: Fred should be freezing! But actually, the heat has all gone into Fred’s body, despite the complete absence of the hot air which is the mechanism for making it do so. In other words, Fred got warmer by disobeying the second law of thermodynamics—in other words, by magic. Likewise, if someone says heat is being secretly stored somewhere by global warming, despite the absence of the very mechanism that does the warming, they are saying global warming is happening by magic. That is the harsh truth of the matter.
One thing I have learned whilst studying the global warming question is that, like many other physical systems, the climate is constrained by limits that can be understood by any intelligent person willing to learn some simple physics. The ‘hotspot’ is one of them. Anyone talking down to you and telling you you have to take the word of some mythical ‘consensus’ of ‘experts’ is trying to hoodwink you.
@Nick stokes
Santer also claimed to have discovered the hot spot using the same or similar methods. Santers paper has been shown to be based on noise, so again the hot spot is still missing in action
re: “the altitude resolution of satellite temperature measurement is not wonderful” – Nick Stokes.
To paraphrase “the attitude resolution of blinkered warmists is far less than wonderful.
No Hot-Spot, no AGW.
Having recently read blogs from the non sceptic viewpoint I can only conclude that any variation in climate over recent time supports the computer climate modellng predictions that recent increases in CO2 is ultimately fully responsible for future runaway global warming.
I’m sure WUWT will put as much effort into examining the radiosonde temperature analysis as it has the surface temperature analysis.
REPLY: You mean you want us to photograph and categorize radiosondes measuring temperature in situ?
Ric Werme (05:43:13) :
I particularly like the Carbon Rationing Assessment Program on Kabooms site LOL
DaveE.
Why don’t you do that for us, Boris, since you’re so interested?
Then tell us whether the water heats the air, or vice-versa. From the ARGO site: click
Ron House, Excellent article! Clear and concise. Thanks.
Fred got warmer by disobeying the second law of thermodynamics—in other words, by magic. Likewise, if someone says heat is being secretly stored somewhere by global warming, despite the absence of the very mechanism that does the warming, they are saying global warming is happening by magic. That is the harsh truth of the matter.
Magic eh, science, magic and religion seem to have interchangeable parts when a political objective is at stake.
This article seems to be confusing the lack of hot spot with hidden-heat-in-the-pipeline, but surely these are two separate issues.
Firstly, the hotspot occurs as a result of increased water vapour from positive feedbacks, not as a result of CO2 forcing per se.
Secondly, the hidden heat argument was floated to account for the fact that air temperatures have apparantly stopped rising even though there is a predicted positive radiative imbalance. The heat was supposed to turn up in the oceans, but this hasn’t occurred since 2003. This is a powerful argument against AGW, but is independant of whether or not there is a hot spot.
The lack of hotspot agrees with Aqua satellite data which has not detected any evidence of water vapour feedback. However, to be fair, this is not evidence that the feedback argument is false, since the warming people keep saying we haven’t reached the tipping point yet. Presumably, they mean that the CO2 hasn’t yet caused a significant enough temperature rise necessary to cause the feedback.
Fred-in-the bed type arguments, as amusing as they are on this blog, are likely to be shredded by the likes of Tamino and Schmidt, and only give ammunition to the alarmists.
Moderator (and Mango)
Here, no paywall, is the later paper by Santer, Thorne et al, specifically taking issue with Douglass et al, which seems to be the guiding hand of the NIPCC section.
Vincent (06:21:16) :
No matter how you slice it, the models did not predict the observed outcome. They are garbage. Admit it.
Kaboom (04:29:00) :
OK, you got me 🙂
“The death pollutant gas carbon dioxide ”
LMAO!!! Hysterical. Good stuff. Keep writing in, I need a good laugh during the day….
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Nick Stokes (04:56:38) :
Ron,
To start with, I think the physics in your analogy is wrong. With or without a blanket, when things have settled down, Fred emits the same heat flux to the environment above the bed (maybe a bit less if he was shivering without the blanket). Probably about 200 W. And it convects away from the bed in the same way. Sure it’s warmer under the blanket. But you probably can’t tell much from the pattern above.
*********************************
The heat signatures of the two scenarios will be different. With or without the blanket after equilibrium has been achieved, there will be the convection heat-induced temperature above Fred. But in the blanket scenario, the area close to Fred will be hotter than without the blanket.
“the climate is constrained by limits that can be understood by any intelligent person willing to learn some simple physics.”
I have a feeling that the only physics that a lot of the AGW crowd ever took was Ex-Lax.
Although the analogy is admittedly simplistic (it is, after all, an analogy), it is interesting to note that it can be extended to encompass additional observational data, i.e., the data from ERBE which indicates that heat loss to space is increasing, just as if Fred had no blanket….
Nick Stokes:
I don’t get how the Thorne et al paper addresses the issue. I thought this paper was along the lines of the Tanaka paper (linked by Anthony Watts here namely, just increase the uncertainty range and then declare the preferred model(s) accurate.
Vincent:
It is not at all clear that the models do not predict a hot spot uniquely associated with human HC emissions. Lucia lundgren tried to track the sources to find what the AGW orthodox position regarding the “hot spot” was.
The performance of the guardians of orthodoxy is pretty slippery on this point. Is it a fingerprint? Do the models say it has to be there? Whoever wrote section 9.2.2 of AR4 seems to think so but the guys at RC are way too smart to get pinned down by a failed prediction–I guess they have some experience in that area. But going from “fingerprint” to a generic “positive feedback forcing from sources of all kinds” still does not explain why the tropical troposphere is not behaving in accordance with the models.
Also, the “tipping point” argument is not consistent with the IPCC models which simply curve upward at a faster rate than CO2 accumulation–there is no step function or magic point. In any event, there would have to be enough warming to get to the tipping point and that would still have to be done per the models.
As for the missing pipeline, the heat is hidden in (a) very windy parts of the upper troposphere (b) somewhere in the deep ocean and/or (c) in vats underneath Dr Evil’s heat-sucking climate lab off the coast of Ecuador (detectable as a big mysterious cold spot on satellite imaging–it’s so obvious, why doesn’t somebody stop him?!!..)
“Any sufficiently analyzed magic is indistinguishable from science!”
— Girl Genius
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarke's_three_laws
“Kaboom (04:29:00) :
Anyone who simplistically compares solid atmospheric science with “Fred in Bed” has a few problems.
The death pollutant gas carbon dioxide is not a blanket (we don’t live in a greenhouse!!) – rather it slows down infra-red radiation, and in the process of slowing it down (reducing the wavelength) absorbs heat, and transmits that heat to the atmosphere, which in turn heats up the oceans, and leads to the proven Arctic ice melt, death of Polar Bears, and flooding of the poor, who are unable to walk away from the ever-encroaching wetlands in the tropics.
This has been PROVEN science for centuries.
In other words, no matter how good the blanket, a fart still smells like a fart.
It doesn’t matter how limited anthropogenic contributions to CO2 are – the simple fact is that the mere existence of anthropogenic CO2 means that we are all culpable for the imminent destruction of the Earth, no matter how miniscule the anthropogenic assistance.
~snip~
Who cares about the lack of a “hot spot” – not I, as climatology has moved on from that inconvenient truth decades ago.”
“”The death pollutant gas carbon dioxide is not a blanket (we don’t live in a greenhouse!!) – rather it slows down infra-red radiation, and in the process of slowing it down (reducing the wavelength) absorbs heat, and transmits that heat to the atmosphere, which in turn heats up the oceans, and leads to the proven Arctic ice melt, death of Polar Bears, and flooding of the poor, who are unable to walk away from the ever-encroaching wetlands in the tropics.””
Are you for real?
“Fred-in-the bed type arguments, as amusing as they are on this blog, are likely to be shredded by the likes of Tamino and Schmidt, and only give ammunition to the alarmists.”
Just want to make sure I have this straight. Alarmists can dismiss the 800 year temperature lag by simply saying “just because it didn’t *start* the warming doesn’t mean it can’t at a later time contribute to it and take over.” That’s OK. But Fred-in-bed is just absurd.
Is that about right?
So CO2 is now proven not to be a greenhouse gas because a models predictions are not being met……….
Wattsupwiththat then?
I think Vincent and some others have missed the key point. The question is not about the detailed mechanism, nor is it relevant that a physical blanket uses a different mechanism than atmospheric greenhouse gases. The point is that any physical process has characteristic patterns. Water flowing across land creates characteristic patterns of channels, etc., in the landscape. Seeing those patterns on Mars is evidence of past water. Cars applying their brakes create characteristic skid marks. Seeing them on a road indicates a car applied its brakes. And so on. This point holds for any physical process, and in that sense my analogy is strictly proper, because at no point do I rely on any specific property of the analogy that doesn’t also hold for the real-world atmosphere. It doesn’t matter that the mechanism is different (which I point out in the article).
For the mechanism proposed by the IPCC, their own models predict characteristic patterns of temperature changes in the atmosphere. If those patterns are not observed (and they aren’t) then that model is wrong, regardless of whether they say CO2 did it or increased H2O vapour or whatever. And the hidden heat argument cannot escape this analysis either. Their models result in heating as an outcome of the operation of the hotspot (at least, if the model encapsulates real physics, and if not, why pay attention to it?). To say that the model is working even without part of its essential physical mechanism is indeed to say it is happening by magic. For another example, one might model the stresses in the components of a crane when it lifts a load. If someone claimed a crane was lifting a load whilst there was no stress in its components, they would be claiming it violated Newton’s third law of motion (equal and opposite action and reaction) – that it was working by magic.
Is there some other physically realistic model that still heats the Earth and yet simulates the natural temperature evolution pattern we actually see? Well let anyone who thinks it exists, find it. Until then, it is simply a baseless (yes, really baseless) speculation, certainly nothing one risks the world’s economy and the planet’s climate upon.
I agree that the wrong fingerprint is a very important tool to see that the strengthening greenhouse effect can’t be too important for the changes in the atmosphere, and I’ve used it in all my public AGW presentations, too.
Fred Singer has also counted this observation to be the ultimate disproof, in some sense.
Of course, there may exist issues related to clouds, precipitation etc. that “erase” the fingerprint, much like rain can erase an ink spot, without removing the average warming. But this is a non-minimal theory that would need extra evidence. Climate models with a realistic fingerprint would have to appear first.
Because the observed fingerprint is so structureless, the new climate models would have to confirm some additional data to become more trustworthy than the pretty-much-falsified models used nowadays.
Jim:
“No matter how you slice it, the models did not predict the observed outcome. They are garbage. Admit it”
Well, I am not Gavin Schmidt or Tamino so it makes little difference if I admit it or not. It is these people that need to admit it.
“Santers paper has been shown to be based on noise, so again the hot spot is still missing in action”
Anybody got a link? I’ve been curious about that one.
I don’t think I’d noticed that the predicted hot spot is right where the ITCZ cu-nims are. A warm-spot could never grow there because each day cu-nims would rip it apart.
The essential incompetence of the model can’t handle this.