New paper from Dr. Judith Curry could explain 'the pause'

From the Georgia Institute of Technology

‘Stadium waves’ could explain lull in global warming

This is an image of Dr. Judith Curry, chair of the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

One of the most controversial issues emerging from the recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) is the failure of global climate models to predict a hiatus in warming of global surface temperatures since 1998. Several ideas have been put forward to explain this hiatus, including what the IPCC refers to as ‘unpredictable climate variability’ that is associated with large-scale circulation regimes in the atmosphere and ocean. The most familiar of these regimes is El Niño/La Niña, which are parts of an oscillation in the ocean-atmosphere system. On longer multi-decadal time scales, there is a network of atmospheric and oceanic circulation regimes, including the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.

A new paper published in the journal Climate Dynamics suggests that this ‘unpredictable climate variability’ behaves in a more predictable way than previously assumed.

The paper’s authors, Marcia Wyatt and Judith Curry, point to the so-called ‘stadium-wave’ signal that propagates like the cheer at sporting events whereby sections of sports fans seated in a stadium stand and sit as a ‘wave’ propagates through the audience. In like manner, the ‘stadium wave’ climate signal propagates across the Northern Hemisphere through a network of ocean, ice, and atmospheric circulation regimes that self-organize into a collective tempo.

The stadium wave hypothesis provides a plausible explanation for the hiatus in warming and helps explain why climate models did not predict this hiatus. Further, the new hypothesis suggests how long the hiatus might last.

Building upon Wyatt’s Ph.D. thesis at the University of Colorado, Wyatt and Curry identified two key ingredients to the propagation and maintenance of this stadium wave signal: the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) and sea ice extent in the Eurasian Arctic shelf seas. The AMO sets the signal’s tempo, while the sea ice bridges communication between ocean and atmosphere. The oscillatory nature of the signal can be thought of in terms of ‘braking,’ in which positive and negative feedbacks interact to support reversals of the circulation regimes. As a result, climate regimes — multiple-decade intervals of warming or cooling — evolve in a spatially and temporally ordered manner. While not strictly periodic in occurrence, their repetition is regular — the order of quasi-oscillatory events remains consistent. Wyatt’s thesis found that the stadium wave signal has existed for at least 300 years.

The new study analyzed indices derived from atmospheric, oceanic and sea ice data since 1900. The linear trend was removed from all indices to focus only the multi-decadal component of natural variability. A multivariate statistical technique called Multi-channel Singular Spectrum Analysis (MSSA) was used to identify patterns of variability shared by all indices analyzed, which characterizes the ‘stadium wave.’ The removal of the long-term trend from the data effectively removes the response from long term climate forcing such as anthropogenic greenhouse gases.

The stadium wave periodically enhances or dampens the trend of long-term rising temperatures, which may explain the recent hiatus in rising global surface temperatures.

“The stadium wave signal predicts that the current pause in global warming could extend into the 2030s,” said Wyatt, an independent scientist after having earned her Ph.D. from the University of Colorado in 2012.

Curry added, “This prediction is in contrast to the recently released IPCC AR5 Report that projects an imminent resumption of the warming, likely to be in the range of a 0.3 to 0.7 degree Celsius rise in global mean surface temperature from 2016 to 2035.” Curry is the chair of the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Previous work done by Wyatt on the ‘wave’ shows the models fail to capture the stadium-wave signal. That this signal is not seen in climate model simulations may partially explain the models’ inability to simulate the current stagnation in global surface temperatures.

“Current climate models are overly damped and deterministic, focusing on the impacts of external forcing rather than simulating the natural internal variability associated with nonlinear interactions of the coupled atmosphere-ocean system,” Curry said.

The study also provides an explanation for seemingly incongruous climate trends, such as how sea ice can continue to decline during this period of stalled warming, and when the sea ice decline might reverse. After temperatures peaked in the late 1990s, hemispheric surface temperatures began to decrease, while the high latitudes of the North Atlantic Ocean continued to warm and Arctic sea ice extent continued to decline. According to the ‘stadium wave’ hypothesis, these trends mark a transition period whereby the future decades will see the North Atlantic Ocean begin to cool and sea ice in the Eurasian Arctic region begin to rebound.

Most interpretations of the recent decline in Arctic sea ice extent have focused on the role of anthropogenic greenhouse gas forcing, with some allowance for natural variability. Declining sea ice extent over the last decade is consistent with the stadium wave signal, and the wave’s continued evolution portends a reversal of this trend of declining sea ice.

“The stadium wave forecasts that sea ice will recover from its recent minimum, first in the West Eurasian Arctic, followed by recovery in the Siberian Arctic,” Wyatt said. “Hence, the sea ice minimum observed in 2012, followed by an increase of sea ice in 2013, is suggestive of consistency with the timing of evolution of the stadium-wave signal.”

The stadium wave holds promise in putting into perspective numerous observations of climate behavior, such as regional patterns of decadal variability in drought and hurricane activity, the researchers say, but a complete understanding of past climate variability and projections of future climate change requires integrating the stadium-wave signal with external climate forcing from the sun, volcanoes and anthropogenic forcing.

“How external forcing projects onto the stadium wave, and whether it influences signal tempo or affects timing or magnitude of regime shifts, is unknown and requires further investigation,” Wyatt said. “While the results of this study appear to have implications regarding the hiatus in warming, the stadium wave signal does not support or refute anthropogenic global warming. The stadium wave hypothesis seeks to explain the natural multi-decadal component of climate variability.”

###

Marcia Wyatt is an independent scientist. Judith Curry’s participation in this research was funded by a Department of Energy STTR grant under award number DE SC007554, awarded jointly to Georgia Tech and the Climate Forecast Applications Network. Any conclusions or opinions are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the sponsoring agencies.

CITATION: M.G. Wyatt, et al., “Role for Eurasian Arctic shelf sea ice in a secularly varying hemispheric climate signal during the 20th century,” (Climate Dynamics, 2013). http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00382-013-1950-2#page-1

The climate data they don't want you to find — free, to your inbox.
Join readers who get 5–8 new articles daily — no algorithms, no shadow bans.
0 0 votes
Article Rating
296 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
milodonharlani
October 10, 2013 2:07 pm

Walt The Physicist says:
October 10, 2013 at 1:50 pm
Disgusting! The NWF has been corrupted, too. No surprise, I guess, since they’re on the CACA gravy train, too.

Admin
October 10, 2013 2:11 pm

Dr. Scafetta, rather than self-promote here, why don’t you head to Climate Etc. and discuss directly with Dr. Curry?

Gordon Oehler
October 10, 2013 2:13 pm

Looks interesting, but I’ll believe it when Willis releases the ‘R’ code. 🙂

Mickey Reno
October 10, 2013 2:16 pm

I see more statisitcal climate models here, lots of mights and coulds, and not much in the way of proposed falsification. But at least this hypothesis is interesting and might someday be falsifiable with real world observation.
Some folks are being very harsh toward Dr. Curry. I’ll give her credit for listening and thinking, and I think her views are slowly evolving. I hope those harsh critics realize that Dr. Curry advocated for eliminating the IPCC last week. One of her statements, “…paradigm paralysis seems fatal in the case of the IPCC, given the widespread nature of the infection and intrinsic motivated reasoning. We need to put down the IPCC as soon as possible.” can be seen in the Conclusion paragraph here: http://judithcurry.com/2013/09/28/ipcc-diagnosis-permanent-paradigm-paralysis/

milodonharlani
October 10, 2013 2:20 pm

Old Grey Badger says:
October 10, 2013 at 10:47 am
Thanks to you & Jo Nova for bringing to this blog’s readers’ attention the remarkably well researched, open access paper on possible lunar effects on the ENSO & other possible climatic phenomena.

October 10, 2013 2:23 pm

charles the moderator says:
Dr. Scafetta, rather than self-promote here, why don’t you head to Climate Etc. and discuss directly with Dr. Curry?
***
Charles, have you noted that I am talking about the 60-year oscillation, of the “pause” in global warming that could extend into the 2030s, etc since several years and that this web-site have published numerous of my finding?

cwon14
October 10, 2013 2:27 pm

cui bono says:
October 10, 2013 at 2:00 pm
Why all this criticism of Dr Curry? She is a genuinely curious scientist, trying to understand what is going on. In that sense, she is a valuable rarity.
///////////
She can’t identify the AGW movement and its leading participants as either left or right wing in political nature. How is that the sign of “curiosity”??
Middling disinformation and distraction. If you remove her from the dominating culture of Greenshirt zealots and judged her on her own nuances would you offer the same praise? She’s a facilitator of the AGW movement as a straw dissenter .

October 10, 2013 2:28 pm

So this just gives a new name to the ~60yr cycle that even I, a non-climate scientist, have been using to analyze with a little skill the periods of floods, droughts, wildfires, hurricanes…. It’s probably good work but why couldn’t they candidly identify the well known (outside of the IPCC) cycle right in the title in stead of focusing on explaining the reason for the politically motivated term ‘pause’. The pause is a way of suggesting a temporary flattening of a curve that is set to take off again on the recent warming trend. Smart money is on the bet that things are going to cool for a couple of decades and that suggests that it might be a couple of decades after that before it could regain what it lost and by then 2100 is going to be just fine, probably in time for it to get colder again and sea level to drop. I’d like to see their graph. I think I’ll plot one up now and compare it when we see theirs in print.

stan stendera
October 10, 2013 2:29 pm

The Dr.’s Curry and Wyatt are obviously football fans with their stadium wave analogy. One more reason to like them. As an aficionado of all things Georgia Tech, not just their football team, I worship the ground Dr. Curry walks on. She is in a long line of Georgia Tech people who have as astronauts and scientists in many fields contributed to human knowledge and welfare. My respect for Georgia Tech in supporting her when her views have not always been PC and for her in having those views knows no bounds. I am, after all, a rambling wreck.

Richdo
October 10, 2013 2:30 pm

vigilantfish says:
October 10, 2013 at 12:24 pm
… the ‘pause’. (What a loathsome, propagandistic, non-scientific term…)…
Yes; perhaps we are now in the “anthropostasis”

Editor
October 10, 2013 2:33 pm

Nicola Scafetta – “Actually my papers do propose mechanisms‘. My apologies. I should have checked.

October 10, 2013 2:36 pm

This is all unfair to a certain Central American country. At what time, when I wasn’t looking, did The Mexican Wave become renamed The Stadium Wave?
Rich.

October 10, 2013 2:44 pm

as posted on JC’s blg:
Dr. Curry implies (as far as I understood it)
The ‘stadium wave’ hypothesis is based by interplay between North Atlantic Ocean temperatures oscillation (AMO) and the changes in the sea ice volumes in the Siberian Arctic Ocean region.
But why could it be so ?
Siberian Arctic shelf ice volumes is partially function of the ratio of fresh water inflow from great Siberian rivers (Ob & Yenisei & Lena) and the saline Arctic sea waters.
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/SHL.htm
The strongest magnetic field in the N. Hemisphere is to be found in the basin of these rivers, Central Siberia. Now let’s consider possibility that mixing of fresh water (poor conductor of electricity) and saline water (good conductor of electricity) could be affected by the Earth’s magnetic field variability. Here is graph of the AMO compared to the geomagnetic field of Ob-Yenisei estuaries area
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/SibArc.htm
Elsewhere it was shown that the AMO also closely follows combined oscillations of the sunspot magnetic cycle and the decadal changes in the Earth’s magnetic field.
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/GSC1.htm
Geomagnetic oscillations: are they coincidence, proxy or causation?
Either way it appears that Dr. Curry’s and Dr Wyatt’s stadium wave hypothesis could strengthen the case for proxy or possible causation.

Brian H
October 10, 2013 2:47 pm

Wyatt provides a response to the initial comments at JC’s: http://judithcurry.com/2013/10/10/the-stadium-wave/#comment-396512
It includes this:

there is nothing to tell us that CO2 is doing much to change things.

Heh. And there never will be.

james griffin
October 10, 2013 2:49 pm

To suggest there is a pause is in a way accepting something unusual is going on….but analysis of empirical data over millions of years shows no such thing. We have for instance been cooling since the Climatic Optimum which was 10,000 years ago and at the end of the last Ice Age in the Younger Dryas Period the temperature went up 10C in 3 years….and then fell again.
As Prof Stott would say “it’s all a bit like Glasgow on a Saturday night….chaotic”!

Janice Moore
October 10, 2013 2:55 pm

Thanks, D. B. Stealey, for the generous compliment and Sam C. and C 114 #(:)) for your affirmation. It is just so nice to find out that ANYONE read one’s post, isn’t it?
As Bob Tisdale said, “Congratulations!” are in order; I added what I did above to say:
“Come on, guys, you can do better.”
*****************
Can’t take the time now to affirm all the fine comments above, so I’ll just tell you, Brian H (2:47pm),
nice post — lol.

Editor
October 10, 2013 2:56 pm

Salvatore Del Prete: Because you thought my congratulating Marcia and Judith for having their paper published was ridiculous, and because I’ve now had the chance to skim Wyatt and Curry (2013), I thought you’d find interest in the comment I left them over at Judith’s blog;
# # #
Congrats, Judith, to you and Marcia.
I found the use of sea ice indices to be very interesting, including the coupling between ocean-ice-atmosphere. And I await the reversal of sea ice trends. In the event that happens, there will be lots of but-but-but……
Some day I’ll figure out why the climate science community insists on using abstract forms of sea surface temperature data as indices, like the PDO, when detrending the sea surface temperatures of the KOE (which dominate the North Pacific) would provide the same basic information (only inverted) and would be less confusing for most persons.
Regards

FrankK
October 10, 2013 2:57 pm

Bart says:
October 10, 2013 at 10:57 am
This is probably right. And, when you subtract out the oscillatory effect, you are left with a trend which has had a steady slope since the end of the LIA. When you then take that out, there isn’t much left for CO2 impact.
————————————————————————————————
Indeed, a steady slope trend of 0.25 deg C per century since the LIA. And as Bart says take that out and there’s bugger-all left for CO2.

Janice Moore
October 10, 2013 3:06 pm

Oh, and Stan Stendera…. (even though you ignore me 9 out of 10 times),
You are a beautifully coherent, greathearted, true Truth in Science Hero. You get the Devotion to Duty and Most Inspirational Award. Don’t think inspiration is important? Ha. Without it, entire armies up and QUIT.
You go, Stan.

Admin
October 10, 2013 3:08 pm

Quoting Dr. Scafettta

Charles, have you noted that I am talking about the 60-year oscillation, of the “pause” in global warming that could extend into the 2030s, etc since several years and that this web-site have published numerous of my finding?

And this thread is about the Curry and Wyatt paper. I suggest you put on your big boy pants, go over there to discuss your criticisms, take credit, post links to all your papers, and tell everyone how you covered all of this previously and explained everything about everything and see how well it flies.

October 10, 2013 3:17 pm

It is a beautiful concept, but why believe in it?
If JC had no history of believing in CO2 induced CAGW, and was looking at the data with fresh eyes, would she have come up with this complex explanation involving CO2? I think not. The belief is followed by a complex scientific explanation and theory.
As usual the science is twisted to fit the belief

Doubting Rich
October 10, 2013 3:45 pm

Hmmmmm … so waves can be used to analyse temperature spreads. Didn’t Fourrier develop wave equations to model heat conduction? Lovely symmetry across scales of time and distance.

Jimbo
October 10, 2013 4:05 pm

“The stadium wave signal predicts that the current pause in global warming could extend into the 2030s,” said Wyatt, an independent scientist after having earned her Ph.D. from the University of Colorado in 2012.

Let’s see now, if this statement is correct it means:
15 years of global warming pause + 17 years of standstill = 32 years at least.
Climate is 30 years or more of weather data.
Could this cause a problem for the consensus?

Jimbo
October 10, 2013 4:07 pm

Curry added, “This prediction is in contrast to the recently released IPCC AR5 Report that projects……

This is what I like, a lady with balls, unlike the men at the IPCC who don’t have any.

Jimbo
October 10, 2013 4:15 pm

The study also provides an explanation for seemingly incongruous climate trends, such as how sea ice can continue to decline during this period of stalled warming, and when the sea ice decline might reverse.

Sorry Curry but Prof. Peter Wadhams says you are wrong. He predicted that there would be no ice in the Arctic latest September 2016. In the real world we saw an over 29% increase this September over 2012.

Guardian – 17 September 2012
This collapse, I predicted would occur in 2015-16 at which time the summer Arctic (August to September) would become ice-free. The final collapse towards that state is now happening and will probably be complete by those dates“.
[Professor Peter Wadhams – Cambridge University]

This is going to be another wonderful Viner / Harold Camping moment. Get ready with your popcorn and cola.

1 3 4 5 6 7 12