太平洋热机:全球气候调节器

Roger N. Jones, J. Ricketts
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引用次数: 11

摘要

摘要气候变化通常被表示为被统计噪声包围的平稳变化的信号。然而,在10年的时间尺度上,变暖是一系列被突变打断的稳定状态。在这里,我们提出的证据表明,这一过程是由横跨热带太平洋的热机调节的。太平洋中东部保持稳定状态,收集热量并将其输送到西太平洋暖池。它起着分配器的作用,将热量向上输送到两极。热机在气候系统内联网,当热能消散时,将不同的振荡和循环联系起来。这个过程是自我调节的。稳定状态的政权将持续下去,直到它们变得不稳定,需要或多或少的权力,这取决于施压的方向。在温室气体的强迫作用下,热机内部产生的变化在浅海中广泛传播,随后在陆地和高纬度地区变暖。热机在20世纪早期处于自由模式,主要受年代际变化的影响。从20世纪60年代开始,它转变为强迫模式,在区域和全球气候中启动了阶梯状的变暖模式。最近的一次转变始于2012年12月的暖池,结束了所谓的间歇期(1997-2013)。2014 - 2015年,全球地表温度急剧升温~ 0.25℃,北半球陆地和高纬度地区地表温度急剧升温> 0.5℃。随着压力的增加,热机将更频繁地换挡。温室气体排放的迅速减少将减缓这一进程,并有可能稳定这一进程。管理不可避免的变化需要培养提前预测变化的能力。对极端事件的快速变化进行规划是一项紧迫的优先事项。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Pacific Ocean heat engine: global climate's regulator
Abstract. Climate change is routinely represented as a smoothly changing signal surrounded by statistical noise. However, on decadal timescales, warming proceeds as a sequence of steady-state regimes punctuated by abrupt shifts. Here we present evidence that this process is regulated by a heat engine spanning the tropical Pacific Ocean. The eastern-central Pacific maintains steady-state conditions, collecting heat and delivering it to the Western Pacific warm pool. This acts as distributor, transporting heat upwards and to the poles. The heat engine is networked within the climate system, linking different oscillations and circulations as heat energy is dissipated. The process is self-regulating. Steady-state regimes will persist until they become unstable and need more or less power depending on the direction of forcing. Under greenhouse gas forcing, shifts initiated within the heat engine propagate broadly across the shallow ocean, followed by warming over land and at higher latitudes. The heat engine was in free mode during the early 20th century, dominated by decadal variability. From the 1960s, it switched into forced mode, initiating a stepladder-like pattern of warming in regional and global climate. The most recent shift commenced in the warm pool in December 2012, ending the so-called hiatus (1997–2013). During 2014–15, surface temperatures warmed abruptly by ~ 0.25 °C globally and > 0.5 °C over northern hemisphere land and high latitudes. With increasing forcing, the heat engine will shift more frequently. Rapid decreases in greenhouse gas emissions will slow the process and potentially, could stabilise it. Managing unavoidable change requires developing the capacity to predict shifts in advance. Planning for rapid changes in extreme events is an urgent priority.
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