The Nuclear Winter of our Discontent

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

Anthony recently discussed a recent paper called “The Role of Atmospheric Nuclear Explosions on the Stagnation of Global Warming in the Mid 20th Century”  (PDF, author’s version). It advances the claim that nuclear tests changed the temperature in the period 1945-1980, in a sort of mini-“nuclear winter”. Here’s their main graph:

ORIGINAL CAPTION: Fig. 1 Anomaly in global-mean surface temperature [GST] between 1880 and 2008. Black line: original data and their trend (the broken line). Red triangles: eruptions whose VEI (volcanic explosivity index) is equal or greater than 5 (source). Green vertical bars: annual yield of atmospheric nuclear explosions (UNSCEAR, 2000). Blue line: corrected GST (0.3K was added to GST data of 1945 and later) based on Thompson et al. (2008) and its trend (the broken line). Red line: re-corrected GST anomaly based on effects of atmospheric nuclear explosion (t was set at 3 years) and Thompson et al. (2008), and its trend (the broken line). Green line: imaginary linear global warming trend. Gray line: sunspot number (source)

Something caught my eye about this graph, something that generally makes me curious.

What I found odd was the logarithmic scale on the right, for the green bars showing the “Annual yield of atmospheric nuclear explosions (MT/y).” I don’t like logarithmic scales unless there’s a good reason for them. In this case, obviously, a good reason would be if the temperature cooling effect of the bombs was proportional, not to the total yield of the explosions, but to the log of the total yield. However, this would mean that smaller explosions would cause more cooling per megatonne than large explosions, which seemed unlikely.

And in fact, their Figure 6 shows that the amount of fine dust injected into the atmosphere goes up, not logarithmically with total yield, but linearly with total bomb yield. In addition, their Figure 5 shows that the total temperature drop varies linearly with the dust concentration. Which means that the temperature drop varies linearly with the total bomb yield. So the logarithmic display is deceptive.

I got to thinking about the question of how I might falsify their claim. I realized that a) the lifetime of dust in the troposphere isn’t very long, months rather than years or decades; b) there’s only a slow exchange of air between the Northern and Southern Hemispheres; and c) the overwhelming majority of the tests were conducted in the Northern Hemisphere. The Brits blew a few off in Australia, and that was about it. China, Russia, and the US did most of the atmospheric testing, and it was virtually all north of the equator.

This means that if their theory is true, the atom bomb tests should have cooled the Northern Hemisphere more than the Southern Hemisphere.

And that, we can say something about. Figure 2 shows the HadCRUT3 Northern and Southern Hemisphere data, along with a non-logarithmic view of the annual yield of the nuclear and thermonuclear bomb tests:

Figure 2. Temperature anomalies for the Northern (blue) and Southern (red) Hemispheres. Orange circles show annual total yield  of all atmospheric (above-ground) nuclear and thermonuclear bombs. Yield data from Figure 1. Vertical gray lines show the start and end of atmospheric tests and bombs, 1945-1980. Fine dust in the lower troposphere has a half-life of days/weeks, and in the upper troposphere, a few months. Stratospheric dust lasts longer, but not much of the dust made it that high.

Immediately, we can see problems. In no particular order these are:

• More than half of the total bomb yield comes from just two years, 1962 and 1963.

• The first big temperature drop takes place in the period 1945-1950, during which time there was little testing.

• During the time when most of the fine dust was injected into the atmosphere, from 1951-1963 (94% of total bomb yield), the temperature was not falling.

So it’s not looking good for the hypothesis.

However, we still haven’t examined what I set out to examine. This was the difference between the Northern and Southern Hemisphere temperatures. Figure 3 shows that difference. We would expect the line to drop if the Northern Hemisphere actually were being cooled by dust injected into the atmosphere.

Figure 3. Difference between the Northern Hemisphere and Southern Hemisphere temperatures (North minus South).

At first glance it looks like they might have something. There is a big drop in the period 1964-72. But there’s a couple of problems with that.

First, if we look at Figure 2, we see that the reason for the drop is the Southern Hemisphere is warming. The Northern Hemisphere is not cooling during that period,. False alarm.

Second, they identify the period of “stagnation of global warming as being 1945-1975. But the relative change between the two hemispheres didn’t happen until 1965.

Overall, I’d say that their explanation of the “stagnation” simply doesn’t hold water. The timing is not right, the size is not right, and the pattern of cooling is not right.

Note that the same arguments apply for the usual culprit advanced for the “stagnation”, which is aerosols, particularly sulfates. As with the bombs, the main sulfate and other aerosol sources were predominantly in the Northern Hemisphere at that time, and they last no longer in the atmosphere than does fine dust from bombs. So the lack of NH cooling argues against the sulfate/aerosol hypothesis as well.

Best to all,

w.

PS – Before you ask, yes, I know that the Partial Test Ban Treaty (PTBT) went into effect in 1963. But the Chinese and the French didn’t pay any attention to that, did they? After all, we’re talking China and France, and besides we were asking them not to do something we’d done over a hundred times.

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jack morrow
April 6, 2011 5:49 pm

I call “bull” on this silly nuclear explosion report and must agree with Willis.

You distort we deride
April 6, 2011 5:52 pm

Willis has a very short memory . This Wall Street Journal piece
http://www.textfiles.com/survival/nkwrmelt.txt
notes that ‘nuclear winter’ s foremost critic was none other than Steve Schneider , whose
‘Nuclear Winter Reappraised ‘ appeared in Foreign Affairs; CF
http://adamant.typepad.com/seitz/2006/12/preherein_honor.html

Jared
April 6, 2011 5:56 pm

Their claim is no better than the pirate claim.
More pirates = lower temps
Less pirates = higher temps
Luckily we have some East Africans bringing pirating back in a big way that’s why temps have fallen on hard times of late.

April 6, 2011 6:08 pm

This post looks like a good rebuttal paper that you should publish.

Lew Skannen
April 6, 2011 6:16 pm

Another excellent clinical analysis.

Ranger Rick
April 6, 2011 6:16 pm

I bet there was an explosion in pixie’s magically coming into existence between 45 and 82, and then a subsequent drop in population.
Hey – Pixie dust is every bit as plausible a cooling cause as the tripe espoused in this paper.

April 6, 2011 6:20 pm

<>
This is a new item of information for me. And very interesting.
Isn’t the lion’s share of man-made CO2 released in the NH? If so how long does it take NH CO2 to mix with the SH?

April 6, 2011 6:29 pm

Ranger Rick,
Willis falsified the Yoshiaki paper. He’s not putting out a new hypothesis here. But it sounds like you are.

James Allison
April 6, 2011 6:35 pm

Hi Willis
The French conducted 41 atmospheric nuclear tests near or over the South Pacific atoll Moruroa between 1966 and 1974. I’m a Kiwi and remember the ruckus well. Are they factored into the calculations?

Neo
April 6, 2011 6:47 pm

Hey, look … all those atmospheric nuclear detonations caused the sun spot number to go down. That by itself deserves a peer-reviewed paper.
I still haven’t seen one to explain why CO2 on Earth made the Earth and many of the other planets and some moons in the solar system warmer.

Rob R
April 6, 2011 7:10 pm

Willis
I would echo James Allison. As a Kiwi i remember that the atmospheric French testing caused rather a lot of strain between the NZ and French governments. NZ even sent naval vessels into the French exclusion zone in protest and in support of civilian craft. This might have contributed to the French shifting to underground testing (but who can tell with the French).
Given that these tests were over atolls or ocean there might not have been much dust put into the atmosphere in any case. Must of the American testing would be similar.

JimBrock
April 6, 2011 7:44 pm

As I recall from fifty years ago in chem e classes, a logarithmic scale flattens the curve, and wouldn’t form the hockey stick. Am I misremembering?

DD More
April 6, 2011 8:02 pm

What ratio is the dust supposedly kick up by the nuc’s vs the 40m tonnes of dust is swept up from north Africa and whistled across the Atlantic Ocean, a distance of over 5,000km, before finally coming to rest in the Amazon basin in South America.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/weather/2009/mar/26/weatherwatch-weather

Editor
April 6, 2011 8:06 pm

Yes Willis, but the French and Chinese tested VERY few bombs compared to the US and Russia. The US is responsible for more than 60% of all bomb tests and Russia is responsible for another 30% or so. The rest are divided between Britain (tested in the US), France, India, China, North Korea, and Pakistan. And yes, while some nations were not signatories to the treaty, pretty much everybody observed the treaty when they realized the environmental/health issues involved. The Nuclear Winter hypothesis for the mid century cooling is a scam, capitalizing on the Fukushima disaster for hype factor.

Scarlet Pumpernickel
April 6, 2011 8:22 pm

So I guess it just destroyed the ozone layer instead 😛

Wondering Aloud
April 6, 2011 8:47 pm

This paper is extremely silly. What some folks are willing to do, to keep the money spigot open, is amazing.

Sleepalot
April 6, 2011 9:22 pm

The cooling precedes the outset of weapon testing, and warming recommences before the cessation of weapon testing: therefore, (post hoc, ergo propter hoc) a cooling climate causes nuclear explosions. Well, either that, or the Earth is sentient.
This new science is marvelous, isn’t it?

Barry L.
April 6, 2011 9:25 pm

Willis,
Thanks again for a great post.
I think you were on to something, but didn’t quite go far enough.
Please try charting the ‘rate of change’ of temperature differential.
It’s the rate of change, and timing of, between the two hemispheres that is relevant to the argument.

April 6, 2011 9:49 pm

Thanks Willis. I read the press release and decided it was not worth any further effort on my part. Wondering Aloud call it “extremely silly”. I think WA is all to kind. Your discomfort with log scales is shared. Sometimes they are very useful as they do make a straight line of things. Grain size distributions in sediment samples comes most to my mind. The straight lines help greatly in comparing large numbers of the things. As you rightly point out, when used for other kinds of comparisons great care is need and they will more often then not give a false impression. This is simply another example of trying to force the facts to conform to your hypothesis then in using the facts to test which one of several is most likely correct. We geologists call it the multiple working hypothesis.

Mac the Knife
April 6, 2011 10:13 pm

Like a velvet wrapped wrecking ball, you smoothly demolished the hypothesis of ‘nuclear cooling’ of the atmosphere, Willis, with concise clarity and little residual ‘dust’.
Nice!

rbateman
April 6, 2011 10:37 pm

One might as well write a paper correlating UFO sightings with Climate Change.
Guaranteed to rake in the dough if you can get a book deal with it.

Steve in SC
April 7, 2011 12:13 am

This is sort of like the theory that Carl Sagan pushed about the flaming Kuwait oil wells causing the equivalent of a localized nuclear winter.
Didn’t happen as I recall.

Adam Gallon
April 7, 2011 1:51 am

I assume that the big Mt yield spike, is the effect of the “Tsar Bomb” ?

John Marshall
April 7, 2011 1:51 am

Volcanic dust has to be injected a long way into the atmospheric column to have a significant effect on climate. To have any effect then the dust must remain in the atmosphere for a considerable time so height of injection is a vital factor, as far as the stratosphere would be ideal. Explosive eruptions have a higher eruptive column than effusive ones and this depends on magma type and gas content. This can change during an eruptive run or between eruptions so a particular volcano cannot be labeled as climate changing simply because it once caused a problem.

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