Thursday, August 14, 2014

Jennifer Francis 1, Elizabeth Barnes 0

There's a theory in climate science that says a very specific effect of climate change is causing much of the extreme weather in the northern hemisphere we've seen recently, including but not limited to Sandy's bizarre left turn, a heatwave over Alaska last year, the Polar Vortex (personally, I love seeing deniers need a diaper change after being told global warming can cause cold weather in places...poor, wittle, confoozed babies), the record downpours and flooding in the eastern US a couple days ago, and on and on and on. The somewhat nascent climatological idea suggests that a warmer Arctic can cause large, lasting waves to develop in the jet stream, what is called meridionality, and...wait a second, I should let someone explain who has forgotten more about this concept than I'll ever fully comprehend...



Now, I happen to agree with Francis, if for no other reason than Curry disagrees, and we all know what has happened to Judith's credibility lately, but I must admit that this is all still debatable. This is frontier research, rather than established fact, and it would help the discussion tremendously if deniers ever woke up one day and smelled the coffee regarding the difference between the two. Fat chance, I know.

This notion has had its detractors, and perhaps foremost in opposition is Elizabeth Barnes of Colorado State University, whose study found no statistically-significant "waviness" in jet stream data over the past few decades. Problem is, the Arctic would have warmed enough to cause this jet stream meridionality only within the past 15 years or so, so looking back 30 years or more does no one any good here.

But as Francis and others point out, the Arctic has only been this warm for a short time. Perhaps the failure to find statistically significant changes is simply due to that.

"It is only in the last 15 years or so that we have been able to see this really starting to kick in," Francis said. "And that's part of the reason that when you do trend analysis, it's hard to detect a trend."


We kinda have to wait and see how the research shakes out before we know whether Francis or Barnes is right. Or maybe we don't, because a new study is saying it's Francis.

I became aware of the paper reading a Phil Plait post today. If you'd like some hearty guffaws at the expense of deniers, I suggest you click on the comment section link for that article. Poor Phil, inundated by ignorant denier impotence. Comments by highly-informed Slate contributors like Sean McCorkle, tokodave, Grenville Cramchild, nomad, TheBlackCat, among others, are very much worth the read, however. And if you'd like to chime in on this topic somewhere where deniers can respond but not flood or Gish-Gallop, then let me have it below. Whenever my comment feature starts being used to a meaningful degree, I'll do my best to keep their discussion-derailing nonsense to a minimum.

1 comment:

citizenschallenge said...

Nice!
First time I've been here. Love the title of the blog, and a good article.

Might I suggest next time someone laughs about AGW and "CO2 science" because another extreme Arctic Excursion causes East Coast winter misery, have them take a look at the temperatures going on within the Arctic Circle. The reality of global circulation and the concept of a climate engine might dawn on them.
Climate Central does a good job of describing such weather even and their geophysical background.