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ویرایش: [1 ed.] نویسندگان: G. Thomas Farmer, John Cook (auth.) سری: ISBN (شابک) : 9789400757561, 9789400757578 ناشر: Springer Netherlands سال نشر: 2013 تعداد صفحات: 564 [566] زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 13 Mb
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Climate Change Science: A Modern Synthesis: Volume 1 - The Physical Climate به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب علم تغییرات آب و هوا: یک سنتز مدرن: دوره 1 - هوای فیزیکی نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
مقدمه ای بر اصول علم تغییر اقلیم با تاکید بر شواهد تجربی تغییرات آب و هوا و گرم شدن جهان. مطالب اضافی در پایان هر فصل آورده شده است. فهرستی از \"چیزهایی که باید بدانید\" هر فصل را باز می کند. فصل ها به گونه ای تنظیم شده اند که دانش آموز ابتدا با روش(های) علمی، نمونه هایی از استفاده از روش علمی از سایر علوم برگرفته از تاریخ علم با تاکید بر علم آب و هوا آشنا می شود. علم آب و هوا در هر فصل بر اساس فرض گرمایش جهانی بررسی می شود. فصل درمان اتمسفر. بیوسفر، ژئوسفر، هیدروسفر، و آنتروپوسفر و روابط متقابل آنها ارائه شده است.
An introduction to the principles of climate change science with an emphasis on the empirical evidence for climate change and a warming world. Additional readings are given at the end of each chapter. A list of "Things to Know" opens each chapter. Chapters are arranged so that the student is first introduced to the scientific method(s), examples of the use of the scientific method from other sciences drawn from the history of science with an emphasis on climate science. Climate science is treated in each chapter based on the premise of global warming. Chapter treatments on the atmosphere. biosphere, geosphere, hydrosphere, and anthroposphere and their inter-relationships are given.
Part I Scientific Principles and the Scientific Method 1 Introduction 3 1.1 Introduction to Global Warming 3 1.2 Greenhouse Effect 3 1.3 Climate Sensitivity 5 1.4 Average Global Temperature from 1880 to 2009 6 1.5 Carbon Dioxide 6 1.6 Global Warming, Climate, and Weather 7 1.6.1 Arctic Sea Ice Extent 1979–2005 8 1.6.2 Impacts of Global Warming 8 1.7 Timescales, Positive Feedbacks, and Tipping Points 9 1.8 Energy and Climate Policy 11 1.8.1 Energy Choices 11 1.9 Forcings and Feedbacks 12 1.9.1 Earth’s Albedo 13 1.9.2 Irradiance 13 1.10 Energy Budget 13 1.11 Affected Weather 14 1.12 Hockey Stick Controversy 14 2 Scientific Principles 17 2.1 Introduction 18 2.2 Internet Searches 19 2.3 The Warming Earth: Heat and the Principles of Thermodynamics 19 2.3.1 The Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics 20 2.3.2 The First Law of Thermodynamics 20 2.3.3 The Second Law of Thermodynamics 21 2.3.4 The Third Law of Thermodynamics 21 2.4 Climate Scientists 22 2.4.1 Scientific Laws and Climate Scientists 23 2.5 Scientific Jargon 24 2.6 Communication Between Scientists and the Public 26 2.7 The Concept of Time 27 2.8 From Hothouse to Icehouse 30 2.9 Earth’s Energy Imbalance 30 2.10 An Introduction to Science 30 2.10.1 Reasons to Study Science 31 2.10.2 The Philosophy of Science 32 2.10.3 Early History of Science 33 2.10.4 Aristotle (384–322 BC ) 34 2.11 Early Scientists 34 2.11.1 Pliny the Elder (23 AD–79 AD) 35 2.11.2 Claudius Ptolemy (c. AD 90–c. AD 168) 35 2.11.3 Nicolaus Copernicus (1473–1543) 36 2.11.4 Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) 36 2.11.5 Francis Bacon (1561–1626) 37 2.11.6 Johannes Kepler and Tycho Brahe 37 2.11.7 Isaac Newton 38 2.12 Empiricism 38 2.13 Inductive Logic 38 2.14 Multiple Working Hypotheses 39 2.15 Deductive Logic 40 2.16 Models and Simulations 40 2.17 The Nature of Science 41 2.18 The Science of Nature 41 2.19 Chaos Theory 42 2.20 Scientific Notation 43 3 The Scientific Method and Its Use 47 3.1 The Scientific Method 48 3.2 A Linearized Approach to the Scientific Method 53 3.3 Data Collection – Experimentation, Measurement, Observation 55 3.4 Ideas, Persistence, Documentation, Testing, Reproducibility, Publication 55 3.5 Hypotheses 57 3.6 Theories 57 3.7 Newton’s Laws of Motion 58 3.8 The Peer-Review Process 58 3.9 Use of the Scientific Method 59 3.9.1 James Hutton and Uniformitarianism 59 3.9.2 Charles Darwin and the Origin of Species 60 3.9.3 James Watson and Francis Crick – The Structure of DNA 62 3.9.4 Harry Hess and Plate Tectonic Theory 63 3.9.5 Plate Tectonic Theory 64 3.9.6 Wallace Broecker and the First Use of the Term Global Warming 65 3.10 Use of the Scientific Method in Climate Change Science 66 3.10.1 Joseph Fourier and the Greenhouse Effect 67 3.10.2 John Tyndall and Thermal Radiation 67 3.10.3 Svante Arrhenius and Carbon Dioxide 68 3.10.4 T. C. Chamberlin and the Ice Ages 69 3.10.5 Guy Stewart Callendar and Rising Temperatures 69 3.10.6 Gilbert Plass and Doubling of Carbon Dioxide 70 3.10.7 Hans Suess and Carbon-14 in Carbon Dioxide 71 3.10.8 Roger Revelle and Ocean Chemistry 72 3.10.9 Charles David Keeling and CO2 73 3.10.10 Syukuro (“Suki”) Manabe and Climate Modeling 74 3.10.11 James Hansen and Temperature Analysis 75 3.10.12 William Ruddiman and Paleoclimate 75 3.10.13 Gavin Schmidt and GISS 76 3.10.14 Stefan Rahmstorf, Sea Level and Temperature Rise 76 Part II Overview Of Climate Change Science 4 Earth’s Energy Budget 81 4.1 Introduction 82 4.2 Weather and Climate 83 4.3 Solar and Heat Energy 83 4.4 Earth’s Radiation Laws 85 4.5 Earth’s Energy Imbalance 91 5 Climate Change Trends 97 5.1 Climate Change Trends 98 5.2 Rising Temperatures 99 5.2.1 Temperature Scales 100 5.2.2 Temperatures Shown by Graphs 100 5.2.3 Rising Land and Sea Temperatures 103 5.2.4 Tropospheric Warming and Stratospheric Cooling 103 5.3 Sources of Uncertainty with Temperature Data 104 5.4 Climate Construction from Instrumental Data 105 5.5 Measurement of Temperature 105 5.5.1 Global Temperature from Meteorological Stations 106 5.6 The Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature (BEST) Study 106 5.7 Land Temperatures from Boreholes 107 5.8 Rising Sea Temperatures 108 5.8.1 Relative Distribution of Sea-Surface Temperatures (SSTs) 109 5.8.2 Ocean Heat Content 110 5.9 Melting Ice 110 5.9.1 Permafrost, Methane, and Clathrates 113 5.9.2 Methane Clathrates 114 5.10 Rising Sea Level 115 5.11 Migration of Plants and Animals 116 5.12 Species Extinctions 116 5.13 Human Health Effects of Rising Temperatures 117 5.14 Attribution 118 5.15 Greenhouse Gases 119 5.16 Human Fingerprints on Global Warming 121 5.16.1 Earth’s Cooling Upper Atmosphere 121 5.16.2 Rising Tropopause 122 5.16.3 Less Heat Escaping to Space 122 5.16.4 Nights Warming Faster than Days 122 5.16.5 Winter Warming Faster than Summer 122 5.16.6 More Fossil Fuel Carbon in Coral 122 5.16.7 Shrinking Upper Atmosphere 123 5.16.8 Less Oxygen in the Atmosphere 123 5.16.9 More Fossil Fuel Carbon in the Atmosphere 123 5.16.10 More Heat Returning to Earth 123 5.16.11 Pattern of Ocean Warming 123 5.17 Components of the Climate Change Process 125 5.18 Other Effects of Global Warming 126 5.19 Forcings and Feedbacks in the Climate System 127 5.19.1 Forcings 127 5.19.2 Positive and Negative Forcing and Their Effects 128 5.19.3 Feedbacks 128 5.20 Climate Sensitivity 130 6 Earth’s Surface Temperature 135 6.1 Introduction 136 6.2 Tipping Points 138 6.3 Temperature Records 139 6.4 Data Reduction 140 6.5 Data Analysis 140 6.6 Climate Data Analysis Tools (CDAT) 140 6.7 Data Reporting 141 6.8 Average Land Temperatures 141 6.9 History of the Development of the Global Average Temperature 141 6.10 Current Analysis Method 142 6.11 Temperature Anomalies 144 6.12 History of Temperature Recordings 149 6.13 Sea Surface Temperatures (SSTs) 150 6.14 Projections of Future Temperatures 153 6.15 The IPCC Special Report on Emission Scenarios (SRES), 2007 154 7 Climate Change Science as Earth Science 159 7.1 Introduction 160 7.2 Climate Science as Earth Science 160 7.3 The Faint Young Sun Paradox 161 7.4 The Gaia Hypothesis 162 7.5 Introduction to Life Science 163 7.6 Introduction to the Atmosphere 164 7.7 Open System Science 165 7.8 Uniformitarianism and Climate Change Science 166 7.9 Recent Climate Data and Future Projections 166 7.10 Components of the Climate Change System 167 7.11 Good Science, Bad Science, and Non-Science 167 7.12 Examples of Good Science 168 7.13 Examples of Bad Science 169 7.14 Examples of Non-Science 170 7.15 Ethics in Science 171 7.16 The Concept of Scale in Earth and Climate Change Science 172 7.17 Map Scales 173 7.18 Fractals 174 7.19 Graph Scales 175 7.20 Time Scales 175 7.21 Earth Scales 175 7.22 Planetary Scales 175 7.23 Cosmic Scales 175 Part III Earth’s Atmosphere 8 Introduction to Earth’s Atmosphere 179 8.1 Introduction 180 8.2 The Atmosphere 181 8.3 Composition of the Atmosphere 181 8.3.1 Carbon Dioxide 183 8.3.2 Methane (CH 4 188 8.3.3 Nitrous Oxide (N 2 O) 188 8.3.4 Ozone (O 3 ) 188 8.3.5 Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) 189 8.3.6 Other Trace Gases 189 8.3.7 Aerosols 190 8.4 Lapse Rate 190 8.5 Vertical Structure of the Atmosphere 191 8.6 Atmospheric Circulation 194 9 Carbon Dioxide, Other Greenhouse Gases, and the Carbon Cycle 199 9.1 Introduction 200 9.2 Carbon Dioxide (CO 2 ) 200 9.2.1 The Keeling Curve 202 9.3 The Carbon Cycle 203 9.4 Carbon Dioxide and the Carbon Cycle 204 9.5 Sources and Sinks of Carbon Dioxide 204 9.5.1 Sources of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide 207 9.5.2 Oxidation – Reduction of Carbon 207 9.5.3 Sinks of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide 208 9.5.4 Carbon Cycle Disequilibrium 209 9.5.5 Restoring Carbon Cycle Equilibrium 209 9.6 Methane (CH 4 ) 210 9.6.1 Sources and Sinks of Atmospheric Methane 211 9.7 Nitrous Oxide 212 9.7.1 Sources and Sinks of Atmospheric Nitrous Oxide 212 9.7.2 Increases in Atmospheric Nitrous Oxide Concentration 212 9.8 Halocarbons 213 9.8.1 Sources and Sinks of Halocarbons 213 9.8.2 Increases in Atmospheric Halocarbons Concentration 213 9.9 Ozone 213 9.10 Other Trace Gases 215 9.11 Atmospheric Residence Time of Greenhouse Gases 215 10 Earth’s Albedo, Radiative Forcing and Climate Change 217 10.1 Introduction 218 10.1.1 Earth’s Albedo 218 10.1.2 Radiative Forcing 220 10.1.3 Global Warming Potentials (GWPs) 222 10.1.4 Calculation of Greenhouse Gas Radiative Forcing 223 10.1.5 Radiative Forcing of Ozone 223 10.1.6 Aerosols 224 10.1.7 Direct Radiative Forcing 225 10.1.8 Indirect Radiative Forcing 226 10.1.9 Total Anthropogenic Radiative Forcing: Greenhouse Gases and Aerosols 226 10.1.10 Observed Climate Variations 226 10.1.11 Clouds and Their Impacts on Climate Change 227 10.1.12 Orographic Rainfall 228 11 Atmospheric Circulation and Climate 231 11.1 Introduction 232 11.2 Atmospheric Circulation 232 11.3 Insolation 233 11.4 Air Flow Patterns 234 11.5 Climate Change Effects on Atmospheric Circulations 237 11.6 Extreme Weather Events 239 11.6.1 Washington, D.C. Metro Rainfall 240 11.6.2 Binghamton, N.Y. – Rainfall 240 11.6.3 Allentown, PA. – Rainfall 240 11.6.4 Harrisburg, PA – Rainfall 240 11.6.5 Cincinnati, Ohio – Rainfall 240 11.6.6 Dayton, Ohio – Rainfall 240 11.6.7 Colorado Springs, Colorado – Rainfall 241 11.6.8 Tucson, Arizona – Rainfall 241 11.7 Record Heat 241 11.7.1 Houston, Texas 241 11.7.2 Dallas, Texas 241 11.7.3 Phoenix, Arizona 241 11.7.4 Seattle, Washington 241 11.7.5 Corpus Christi, Texas 242 11.8 Record Cold 242 11.8.1 International Falls, Minnesota 242 11.9 Record River Flooding 242 11.10 Tropical Storm Lee’s Tornadoes 242 11.11 Other Meteorological Events 242 Part IV The World Ocean And Climate 12 The World Ocean 247 12.1 Introduction 248 12.2 The World Ocean 248 12.3 Ocean Salinity 249 12.4 Ocean Topography 250 12.5 The World Ocean and Carbon Dioxide 253 12.6 Ocean Acidification 254 12.7 Oceanic Circulation 255 12.7.1 Thermohaline Circulation 256 13 Ocean Heat Content and Rising Sea Level 261 13.1 Introduction 262 13.2 Global Warming and Sea Level Rise 262 13.3 Arctic Oscillation (AO) and Arctic Sea Ice 263 13.4 Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) 265 13.5 Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) 266 13.6 Future Potential Sea Level Rise 266 13.7 Ocean Heat Content 268 13.8 El Niño – La Niña (or ENSO) 269 Part V Earth’s Cryosphere And Recent Climate History 14 Glaciers and the Latest Ice Age 277 14.1 Introduction 278 14.2 Greenland Ice Sheet 279 14.3 Antarctica 284 14.4 Mountain Glaciers 287 14.5 Ice Cores 291 14.6 Stable Isotope Analysis 292 14.7 Ice Cores and Proxies 293 14.7.1 Dating Ice Cores 293 14.7.2 Mountain Glacier Ice Cores 294 14.8 The “Ice Age” 296 14.8.1 History 296 14.8.2 Climate Forcing by Orbital Variations 296 14.8.3 Eccentricity 297 14.8.4 Obliquity 298 14.8.5 Precession 299 14.9 Milankovitch Cycles and Ice Ages 300 14.10 Solar Variations 302 14.11 Questions Not Explained by Milankovitch Cycles 305 15 Permafrost and Methane 307 15.1 Introduction 308 15.2 Distribution 308 15.3 Origin of Permafrost 310 15.4 Methane Chemistry 311 15.5 Future Projections for Permafrost and Methane 314 15.6 Methane Gun Hypothesis 315 Part VI Land And Its Climates 16 Continents and Mountain Ranges 321 16.1 Introduction 322 16.2 Continental Drift 323 16.3 Harry Hess and Sea-Floor Spreading 324 16.4 Plate Tectonics 326 16.4.1 Types of Plate Boundaries 327 16.5 Continental Mountain Ranges 331 16.6 Islands 336 17 Climate Classifications 339 17.1 An Introduction to Climate Classification 340 17.2 Air Masses 342 17.3 Modern Climate Classification 345 17.3.1 The Bergeron Climate Classification 345 17.4 The Köppen-Geiger Classification 346 17.4.1 Group A Climates 346 17.4.2 Group B Climates 347 17.4.3 Group C Climates 347 17.4.4 Group D Climates 348 17.4.5 Group E Climates 349 17.5 The Thornthwaite Climate Classification 350 Part VII Climate Models 18 Types of Models 355 18.1 Introduction 356 18.2 Climate Models 356 18.2.1 Simplifying the Climate System 357 18.2.2 Boundary Conditions 357 18.2.3 Climate Modeling Centers 360 18.3 Types of Climate Models 365 18.3.1 Box Models 365 18.3.2 Energy Balance Models 365 18.3.3 Radiative-Convective Models 368 18.3.4 Statistical-Dynamical Models 368 18.3.5 General Circulation Models 368 18.4 Confidence and Validation 369 Part VIII Climates of the Past (Paleoclimatology) 19 Ancient Climates and Proxies 375 19.1 Introduction 376 19.2 Historical Records 377 19.3 Ice Cores 378 19.4 Stable Isotope Analysis 378 19.5 Ice Cores and Proxies 378 19.6 Dating Ice Cores 378 19.7 Dendroclimatology 379 19.8 Ocean Sediments 379 19.9 Paleoclimate Reconstruction from Biogenic Material 380 19.10 Paleoclimate Reconstruction from Terrigenous Material 384 19.11 Terrestrial Sediments 384 19.12 Periglacial Features 385 19.13 Glacial Fluctuations 385 19.14 Lake-Level Fluctuations 385 19.14.1 Russia’s Lake El’gygytgyn (Lake E) 386 19.15 Pollen Analysis 389 19.16 Sedimentary Rocks 390 20 Climates of the Recent Past 393 20.1 Introduction 394 20.2 Holocene Climates 394 20.3 Younger Dryas Cooling 396 20.4 Mid-Holocene Thermal Maximum 397 20.5 Late Holocene Neoglaciation 398 20.6 Little Ice Age 398 20.7 Medieval Warm Period 398 20.8 Holocene Climate Forcing Mechanisms 399 20.9 Coupled Internally-Externally Driven Climate Change 400 20.10 Contemporary Climate Change 400 21 Pleistocene Glaciations 407 21.1 Glacials and Interglacials 409 21.2 Causes of Glacial Advances and Retreats 411 21.3 Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum 411 21.4 Initial Eocene Thermal Maximum (IETM) 412 21.5 The Cooling Begins 412 21.6 Formation of the Isthmus of Panama and the Freezing of the Arctic 413 21.7 Other Influences and Possible Causes of Ice Ages 415 21.8 Maximum Extent and Characteristics of Continental Glaciers 416 21.8.1 The North American Ice Line 418 21.8.2 Europe and Asia’s Continental Glaciation 419 21.8.3 Southern Hemisphere Glaciation 420 Part IX Future Climates And Mitigation 22 Projections of Future Climates 431 22.1 Introduction 432 22.2 Hotter – Global Warming 433 22.3 Flatter – The Digital Age 433 22.4 More Crowded – Population Increase 434 22.4.1 Population and Demographics 436 22.5 IPCC Projections of Future Climate Change 438 22.6 Politics and Global Warming 439 22.6.1 Politicians and Their Views 440 22.6.2 Ronald Reagan 441 22.6.3 Richard Nixon 441 22.6.4 Barak Obama 441 Part X Skeptics And Deniers Of Global Warming 23 Understanding Climate Change Denial 445 23.1 Introduction 446 23.2 Basis for the Scientific Consensus on Climate Change 446 23.3 Characteristics of Denial 449 23.3.1 Fake Experts 450 23.3.2 Cherry Picking 451 23.3.3 Logical Fallacies 452 23.3.4 Impossible Expectations 454 23.3.5 Conspiracy Theories 454 23.3.6 Denial Characteristics at a Psychological Level 456 23.4 Drivers of Climate Denial 457 23.4.1 Conservative Ideology 458 23.4.2 Conservative Think Tanks 458 23.4.3 Mainstream Media’s Balance-as-Bias 459 23.4.4 Government 460 23.4.5 Corporate Vested Interests 461 23.4.6 Internet 461 23.5 Responding to Climate Denial 462 23.5.1 Familiarity Backfire Effect 462 23.5.2 Overkill Backfire Effect 463 23.5.3 Worldview Backfire Effect 463 23.5.4 Alternative Explanation 464 23.5.5 Summary 464 Part XI Specific Declarations Against Climate Science And Climate Scientists 24 Rebuttals to Climate Myths 469 24.1 Introduction 470 24.2 Fake Experts 470 24.2.1 A Petition of Tens of Thousands of Non-experts 470 24.2.2 A Contrarian Take on Climate Sensitivity 471 24.3 Cherry Picking 472 24.3.1 Warming at Over Two Hiroshima Bombs per Second 472 24.3.2 Hockey Stick Versus Hockey Team 474 24.3.3 Sun and Climate Moving in Opposite Directions 475 24.3.4 Human Emissions Upsetting the Natural Balance 476 24.4 Logical Fallacies 476 24.4.1 What Does Past Climate Change Tell Us? 477 24.4.2 CO2 Lag – The Chicken and Egg Dilemma 478 24.4.3 What Were Scientists Predicting in the 1970s? 479 24.4.4 How a Trace Gas Has Such a Significant Effect 480 24.5 Impossible Expectations 480 24.5.1 What Lessons Do We Learn from Past Model Predictions? 480 24.5.2 Science Is Never Settled 481 24.5.3 Uncertainty Is Not Our Friend 482 24.6 Conspiracy Theories 483 24.6.1 Nine Climategate Investigations Across Two Countries 483 24.6.2 Confusing ‘Mike’s Trick’ with ‘Hide the Decline’ 484 24.6.3 Tracking Down Trenberth’s ‘Missing Heat’ 485 Appendices487 Abbreviations493 Glossary503 Index535