Posted on 08/06/2014 6:49:27 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Remember how CO2 is supposed to cause warmer winters, and warmer nights? Well now CO2 also produces cold snaps. No matter what weather you get, there is a citation to blame CO2. Nature (the formerly great science journal) and Northeastern University have produced another permutation of outputs from models we know are broken.
The first line in the press release is false and smugly so: most scientists 97 percent of them, to be exact agree that the temperature of the planet is rising and that the increase is due to human activities . 10 seconds on Google would have shown 60% of geoscientists and engineers dont agree.
If Kodra and co were trying to be accurate, they could have said 97% of annointed climate scientists agree . If they were trying to be scientific, of course, they wouldnt mention a consensus at all. If they had good evidence, theyd talk about that instead.
They dug deep in The-Book-of-Cliches for the press release. Strip away the advertising spin and I think this is the nub of the work:
While global temperature is indeed increasing, so too is the variability in temperature extremes. For instance, while each years average hottest and coldest temperatures will likely rise, those averages will also tend to fall within a wider range of potential high and low temperate extremes than are currently being observed. This means that even as overall temperatures rise, we may still continue to experience extreme cold snaps
Essentially, by using a models that didnt predict the pause, nor the missing hot spot, and with homogenized, reanalyzed data that probably does not resemble the observations, they found something interesting. The modern witchdoctors are at work. Runestones, tea-leaves, broken models, whats the difference?
The study used simulations from the most recent climate models developed by groups around the world for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and reanalysis data sets, which are generated by blending the best available weather observations with numerical weather models. The team combined a suite of methods in a relatively new way to characterize extremes and explain how their variability is influenced by things like the seasons, geographical region, and the land-sea interface. The analysis of multiple climate model runs and reanalysis data sets was necessary to account for uncertainties in the physics and model imperfections.
So because the models dont work, they did a lot of runs, and because there are infinite ways to reanalyze data, they used several different datasets too. (Its not like history ever has one correct temperature.) They felt the average of all these errors showed something about the variability of artificial simulations of our climate. Bravo.
They also felt they should tell us this big news: It suggests that the natural processes that drive weather anomalies today could continue to do so in a warming future. It would have been something special indeed if they found that nature had stopped.
This study was done by Evan Kodra, PhD14″. (I guess he must be quite excited about graduating then? Congrats to Evan )
Evan Kodra & Auroop R. Ganguly | doi:10.1038/srep05884
A statistical analysis reveals projections of consistently larger increases in the highest percentiles of summer and winter temperature maxima and minima versus the respective lowest percentiles, resulting in a wider range of temperature extremes in the future. These asymmetric changes in tail distributions of temperature appear robust when explored through 14 CMIP5 climate models and three reanalysis datasets. Asymmetry of projected increases in temperature extremes generalizes widely. Magnitude of the projected asymmetry depends significantly on region, season, land-ocean contrast, and climate model variability as well as whether the extremes of consideration are seasonal minima or maxima events. An assessment of potential physical mechanisms provides support for asymmetric tail increases and hence wider temperature extremes ranges, especially for northern winter extremes. These results offer statistically grounded perspectives on projected changes in the IPCC-recommended extremes indices relevant for impacts and adaptation studies.
Producing something this bad costs a lot of money it took some part of $10 million from an Expeditions in Computing Grant . An expedition indeed. The duo used, wait for it computational tools from Big Data science to systematically examine this aspect of climate change for the first time. (Thatll show those climate modelers using slide rules with Small Data science. And us naive types who use a spreadsheet.)
One of the first requirements for a good scientific theory is that it must be falsifiable under certain conditions - theories that explain everything explain nothing......
“One of the first requirements for a good scientific theory is that it must be falsifiable under certain conditions - theories that explain everything explain nothing......”
I see someone else reads Karl Popper besides me on these boards
Too often conservatives try to make economic arguments against the philosophy of the left. Read some Karl Popper, it will change the way you talk to your leftist friends
Still waiting to be told how the advocates of AGW know the temperature of Earth’s atmosphere? If their campaign to reorder the industrial sector of the economy of the U.S.A.
is based on temperature estimates derived from mathematical models, they deserve above all to be ignored.
While I guess the original discussion of falsification in scientific theories came from Popper, I was reminded of it in a recent exchange in the “American Scientist” about the uses and abuses of simulation in scientific research - all of the “models” climate scientists use to predict climate change are really just simulations, and one of the primary problems with simulations is that they tend to focus on only one variable, in this case CO2, while letting all sorts of other variables run free - in fact climate scientists have no idea of the full universe of variables which control long-range climate, let alone how they control climate or interact with each other - so they can jigger their primary factor however they need to show the results they want, without regard to how other inputs may change the picture - to call climate science junk science is disrespectful to real junk science......
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