From the Georgia Institute of Technology
‘Stadium waves’ could explain lull in global warming

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
Bob I should have known better.
They really have said nothing new. .
“The removal of the long-term trend from the data effectively removes the response from long term climate forcing such as anthropogenic greenhouse gases.”
Who’d have thought….
More than anything, I think that this shows that a) The science is not settled; and b) The models that are the basis for CAGW are bogus.
I would rather think of the stadium wave as a model of the global warming delusion, initiated by a few and propagated by social pressure.
Bob, they have said nothing new, nothing none of us have known which in turn does nothing to give us a further understanding of our climate system.
Everything they said is known ,thre is no new information.
charles the moderator says:
October 10, 2013 at 3:08 pm
Quoting Dr. Scafettta…..
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.
**********
Dear Charles, beside the fact that your comment is villain, which says much on yourself,
I am commenting about the Curry and Wyatt paper.
That paper confirms the existence of the 60-year wave I am talking since 2009 (presented at the EPA) and is in agreement with all my papers that Anthony has recently dismissed based on misleading and unfair opinions he get from some of his friends.
As I said above the paper is interesting but misses a discussion on the the driving forces, which however my papers address.
Note that this is aknowledged in the comment from Wyatt:
http://judithcurry.com/2013/10/10/the-stadium-wave/#comment-396512
******
One could invoke network theory to surmise: if the solar variability does indeed pulse with a multidecadal cadence (as has been suggested by many on these blogs and in recent papers), due to planetary gravitational fields tugging on the barycenter of the solar system, for example, and if the internal variability of the climate network were paced at a similar beat, could solar’s rhythm entrain that of the intrinsic system and nudge the tempo accordingly?
sing the different Lean and then Wang reconstructions, where the solar constant changes magnitude, did NOT change the results. That is b/c tempo is all that matters in this analysis. To be specific, SHARED tempo. What differed was when we used the updated Hoyt/Schatten, based on five proxies. It pulses similarly to the other reconstruction and to our wave and as the other solar reconstructions,
******
All the above points are already extensively discussed in my papers since 2010. So, if your readers would like to know more about these things they may be interested in visiting my web-site:
http://people.duke.edu/~ns2002/#astronomical_model
Or read my latest work, e.g., that they can find there too
Scafetta, N. 2013. Discussion on climate oscillations: CMIP5 general
circulation models versus a semi-empirical harmonic model based on
astronomical cycles. Earth-Science Reviews 126, 321-357.
DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2013.08.008.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0012825213001402
And perhaps Anthony should start to reconsider his unreasonable position.
I want some thoughts. What do you think Warmist climate scientists would say IF the Arctic sea ice extent grew over the next 10 years (with downs and ups, but mostly ups)? Here are a few thoughts of mine:
“Extent isn’t important, we need to look at volume”. (ducking, diving, weaving)
“The trend since 1979 is still down.”
“The trend since 1850 is still down”
“It’s man-made masking.”
“It’s rotten, crumbly, wibbly wobbly sea ice.”
“A new paper predicts rapid melting soon, temporary reprieve.”
What if volume increased too?
“But the Antarctic Peninsula is hotting up.”
“Antarctica’s sea ice extent is increasing due to catastrophic warming.”
“Antarctica’s glaciers are slipping and sliding.”
“Just look at Greenland……………………………………………………………………….”
Whenever I lack entertainment, I check out these chaps. They never fail.
gibbersh
“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,”
Henk Tennekes, where are you when we need you?
“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,”
An honest plea for more money.
The problem with “Multi-channel Singular Spectrum Analysis” or any other type embedding dimension type analysis is that you never know if you have enough data. Since the signal, by definition, is not necessarily bounded, you never know if there is some lower or higher dimension signal is about to jump right in and change the analysis that was just completed. Yeah, it’s a really good curve fit (a really good honest one) but it’s just a curve fit.
There is an alternative explanation for the pause which does not require belief in any waves and that is that the CO2 heating effect is quite small. How small? Well, according to MODTRAN, at the current concentration of 400 ppm each further 100 ppm is worth 0.1 degrees C. We are adding 2 ppm per annum so that is 0.002 degrees per annum for a total of 0.034 degrees over the pause. The pause is actually the end of the plateau in solar activity. With an 8 to 12 year lag between solar activity and climate, we are about to feel the effect of the downturn after the 2003 second peak of Solar Cycle 23.
I like this. Makes intuitive sense. The thermal mass and inertia of the climate system make me think of a stadium wave, all right; but also of a bunch of weights of different sizes, coupled with springs of different strengths, and with drivers and brakes here and there. Fire that baby up, push here and pull there, and keep introducing odd jiggles of different force and duration and frequency. Then watch its behavior evolve. I would expect to see emergent semi-chaotic coupled nonlinear dynamics a little like the real world of weather and climate. But what do I know? I don’t even play a climatologist on TV. I’m just glad we have folks like Wyatt and Curry doing this kind of work, which is at least sensible and useful, and may be breakthrough.
The Younger Dryas = nobody knows why.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016%2Fj.quascirev.2008.02.004
I am with Stephen Wild on this one.
This paper is a classic case of some one in the “in-crowd” saying exactly what people in the “out-crowd” having being saying for close to a decade (or more) and being told by the “in-crowd” that they are “paradigm-breakers”.
Yes, it is good that some one has got a peer-reviewed statement (of what has been been obvious to others) through the to the hallowed halls of “main-stream” science.
Try imagining a crowd of 100 people screaming “danger, catastrophe, the end is nigh, and kiss your shiny knee-caps good-bye” at you for over 10 years. Imagine that the screams and yells were so loud that they completely drowned out the quiet voices of two people who were calling for calm and a more tempered approach.
Suddenly, after 10 years of this cacophony, two of the yelling screaming crowd step forward, making sure that they block out your view of the two quietly spoken skeptics and proudly announce to one and all that:”we should all adopt a calmer and a more tempered approach”.
I am sure that many would cheer this new revelation…..
However, I for one cannot help feeling sorry for the two who got spat upon by all of the others in the screaming crowd, including the two who are now basking in the glow of this so-called “new discovery”.
. .
This thread regrettably illustrates the worst of climate change skepticism, rather than the best. Especially concerning a paper that puts down the IPCC AR5, from a reformed former ‘insider’.
Worse than the present Republican House of Representatives. Self destruction is not a seemly act. If you all insist on it, why not do it privately rather than so publicly using unseemly rants?
Leslie:
I was just thinking the same- an excellent analogy.
By the way, here in Oz we call it a “Mexican” wave. Last one I was involved in was at a 1 day cricket match at the Gabba about 10 or 12 years ago. I think it has been banned since, perhaps because it creates a lot of rubbish thrown up and causes the crowd to lose interest in the main game- so the analogy with AGW is a good one.
Izzat “Stadium Wave” sorta like the sheet of darkness that sweeps across the plains and mountains and shorelines, and oceans, followed by a similar light sheet, only to be repeated time and again each 24 hours as the earth rotates on its axis, driving this dark/light “Stadium wave ” phenomenon ???
Mojib Latif beat her to the punch by several years. World Climate Conference 2009.
There it is. Curry’s a Magic Gasser. Like all Magic Gassers everything scientific represents “a deep mystery”
When the thermometer presents utter mystery to them,
they claim you don’t understand.
An entire blogosphere full of paid PhDs who can’t predict which way a thermometer will go.
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October 10, 2013 at 11:16 am
(Janice Moore says:
October 10, 2013 at 10:48 am)
cwon14 says:
Janice, Dr. Curry is a professional hand waver. Skeptics are so beaten down or politically ambivalent they accept it.
Look…we can all see how the game of science works. As the consensus science collapses, there will be mainstream scientists who will repackage what skeptics have been saying for two decades. Some of them may be the very ones who ridiculed and made fun of the skeptics. They will act like they have discovered something new. The rest of the club will then pretend that it is something new and give these fraudsters all the credit, and the chairs and the pensions. Judith Curry may be the first and the least offensive of this group.
If you are a citizen or ‘outside the mainstream’ skeptical scientist, don’t expect any recognition, at least not your lifetime. Take heart in the knowledge that you were right all along, that the global con known as CAGW is collapsing and that you probably had more to do with it than the world will ever know.
We appreciate your efforts and thank you!
Kinda off topic.
Ooooooo arghhhhhhh.
Jimbo says:
October 10, 2013 at 4:56 pm
An event like the YD has been detected during Termination III (~245 Ka) & possibly Termination IV in data from Chinese stalagmites.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19815769
The usual genuflection toward CACA is of course obligatorily made in the abstract. Full article apparently not currently available due to government shutdown/Obama administration ploy.
Salvatore Del Prete says:
October 10, 2013 at 1:00 pm
Salvatore,
http://astroclimateconnection.blogspot.com.au/2013/06/are-dansgaard-oeschger-d-o-warm-events.html
Your local Lunar-tic
Rud Istvan says:
October 10, 2013 at 5:05 pm
Response:
I take it that you meant the following:
“Bad skeptics, bad skeptics…. You should be grateful that two out of the two thousand climate-alarmists have stopped spitting in your face. Next you be asking them to stop kicking you while you are down. The nerve of some people…. “
“””””…….Rud Istvan says:
October 10, 2013 at 5:05 pm
This thread regrettably illustrates the worst of climate change skepticism, rather than the best. Especially concerning a paper that puts down the IPCC AR5, from a reformed former ‘insider’.
Worse than the present Republican House of Representatives. Self destruction is not a seemly act. If you all insist on it, why not do it privately rather than so publicly using unseemly rants?…….””””””
Dunno where you hail from Rud, But I hasten to point out that those “Republican House of Representatives” folks you deride, just happened to be sent there by a clear majority of the voting people of the United States; and they were sent there with a job to do; namely to put an end to the revolving credit card financing Scam that has replaced the Constitutionally required “Annual Budget” that the Administration is REQUIRED to present to those folks each and every year for their approval.
The present executive branch administration have NEVER presented an annual budget for approval, ever since they have been in office.
So any self destruction that YOU might perceive is being dictated by a self centered spoiled brat who never in his life has made a budget for a lemonade stand.
Ken Stewart says:
October 10, 2013 at 5:06 pm
Canadians claim to have invented the Wave in the 1970s. Actual evidence of its first appearance however dates to the US in Oct 1981. The professional cheerleader Krazy George says he has footage of his leading a Wave at an As-Yankees baseball playoff game that month, having accidentally invented it at a previous hockey game (maybe he borrowed it from Canadians without attribution). There is definite proof of a Wave at a U-Dub football game in Seattle later that month. Texas JayCees also claim to have invented it while waiting for Reagan to speak in June of that year.
It’s called the Mexican Wave in the rest of the English-speaking world because it caught on South of the Border in time for the 1986 World Cup there.
The problem of trash can be managed by giving spectators something to hold up to make designs that move:
http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/blog/shutdown_corner/post/Packers-crowd-gets-patriotic-with-enormous-Ameri?urn=nfl-wp6750
But then someone has to print all those placards.