An Analysis of Tropospheric Humidity Trends from RadiosondesSource: Journal of Climate:;2009:;volume( 022 ):;issue: 022::page 5820DOI: 10.1175/2009JCLI2879.1Publisher: American Meteorological Society
Abstract: A new analysis of historical radiosonde humidity observations is described. An assessment of both known and unknown instrument and observing practice changes has been conducted to assess their impact on bias and uncertainty in long-term trends. The processing of the data includes interpolation of data to address known sampling bias from missing dry day and cold temperature events, a first-guess adjustment for known radiosonde model changes, and a more sophisticated ensemble of estimates based on 100 neighbor-based homogenizations. At each stage the impact and uncertainty of the process has been quantified. The adjustments remove an apparent drying over Europe and parts of Asia and introduce greater consistency between temperature and specific humidity trends from day and night observations. Interannual variability and trends at the surface are shown to be in good agreement with independent in situ datasets, although some steplike discrepancies are apparent between the time series of relative humidity at the surface. Adjusted trends, accounting for documented and undocumented break points and their uncertainty, across the extratropical Northern Hemisphere lower and midtroposphere show warming of 0.1?0.4 K decade?1 and moistening on the order of 1%?5% decade?1 since 1970. There is little or no change in the observed relative humidity in the same period, consistent with climate model expectation of a positive water vapor feedback in the extratropics with near-constant relative humidity.
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contributor author | McCarthy, Mark P. | |
contributor author | Thorne, P. W. | |
contributor author | Titchner, H. A. | |
date accessioned | 2017-06-09T16:29:20Z | |
date available | 2017-06-09T16:29:20Z | |
date copyright | 2009/11/01 | |
date issued | 2009 | |
identifier issn | 0894-8755 | |
identifier other | ams-68776.pdf | |
identifier uri | http://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4210371 | |
description abstract | A new analysis of historical radiosonde humidity observations is described. An assessment of both known and unknown instrument and observing practice changes has been conducted to assess their impact on bias and uncertainty in long-term trends. The processing of the data includes interpolation of data to address known sampling bias from missing dry day and cold temperature events, a first-guess adjustment for known radiosonde model changes, and a more sophisticated ensemble of estimates based on 100 neighbor-based homogenizations. At each stage the impact and uncertainty of the process has been quantified. The adjustments remove an apparent drying over Europe and parts of Asia and introduce greater consistency between temperature and specific humidity trends from day and night observations. Interannual variability and trends at the surface are shown to be in good agreement with independent in situ datasets, although some steplike discrepancies are apparent between the time series of relative humidity at the surface. Adjusted trends, accounting for documented and undocumented break points and their uncertainty, across the extratropical Northern Hemisphere lower and midtroposphere show warming of 0.1?0.4 K decade?1 and moistening on the order of 1%?5% decade?1 since 1970. There is little or no change in the observed relative humidity in the same period, consistent with climate model expectation of a positive water vapor feedback in the extratropics with near-constant relative humidity. | |
publisher | American Meteorological Society | |
title | An Analysis of Tropospheric Humidity Trends from Radiosondes | |
type | Journal Paper | |
journal volume | 22 | |
journal issue | 22 | |
journal title | Journal of Climate | |
identifier doi | 10.1175/2009JCLI2879.1 | |
journal fristpage | 5820 | |
journal lastpage | 5838 | |
tree | Journal of Climate:;2009:;volume( 022 ):;issue: 022 | |
contenttype | Fulltext |