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Radiative Forcing and Climate Sensitivity
  • Trevor Underwood
Trevor Underwood
Independent researcher, Independent researcher

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Abstract

Current estimates of the impact of an increase in greenhouse gas concentrations on global warming, including by the IPCC and in General Circulation Models, are based on radiative forcing. Two recently published formulations of the theoretical foundation for radiative forcing are reviewed. Radiative forcing at the tropopause is calculated by assuming that the absorption of terrestrial radiation by greenhouse gases is determined by their spectral properties, using a radiative transmittance function based on the line strength and line shape of the absorption lines and the vertical optical mass, whilst, under conditions of local thermodynamic equilibrium, the emission of radiation at each layer of the atmosphere is given by the Planck blackbody function at the local atmospheric temperature. Radiative forcing is given by the net change in radiative flux at the troposphere due to an increase in greenhouse gases. Climate change is seen to take place when the system responds to restore the radiative equilibrium. Without any theoretical foundation, a linear relationship between the change in surface temperature in °C and radiative forcing is assumed. Here, IPCC 2013’s estimate of radiative forcing of 2.83 W/m2 due to the increase in greenhouse gases from 1750 to 2011 is used to calculate the resulting change in radiative flux at the Earth’s surface under reasonable assumptions, and the Stefan-Boltzmann law is applied to calculate the change in surface temperature of between 0.8 and 1.0 °C. This represents a climate sensitivity of around 0.32 °C/(W/m2), about one third of the climate sensitivity of 1.0 °C/(W/m2) used by IPCC 2013 that was obtained from the mean regression-based values of 30 climate models.