The Spectroscopic Foundation of Radiative Forcing by Carbon Dioxide
Invited
Abstract
The radiative forcing (RF) of carbon dioxide (CO2) is the leading contribution to climate change from anthropogenic activities. Calculating CO2 RF requires detailed knowledge of spectral line parameters for thousands of infrared absorption lines. A reliable spectroscopic characterization of CO2 forcing is critical to scientific and policy assessments of present climate and climate change. Our results show that CO2 RF in a variety of atmospheres is remarkably insensitive to known uncertainties in the three main CO2 spectroscopic parameters: the line shapes, line strengths, and line half widths. We specifically examine uncertainty in RF due to line mixing as this process is critical in determining line shapes in the far wings of CO2 absorption lines. RF computed with a pure Voigt line shape is also examined. Overall, the spectroscopic uncertainty in present-day CO2 RF is less than 1% (global average), indicating a robust foundation in our understanding of how rising CO2 warms the climate system.
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Presenters
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Martin Mlynczak
NASA Langley
Authors
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Martin Mlynczak
NASA Langley
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Taumi Daniels
NASA Langley
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David Kratz
NASA Langley
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Daniel Feldman
Climate and Ecological Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley Natl Lab, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
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William Collins
Climate and Ecological Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley Natl Lab, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
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Eli Mlawer
Atmospheric and Environmental Research
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Matthew Alvarado
Atmospheric and Environmental Research
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James Lawler
University of Wisconsin
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L. Wilmer Anderson
University of Wisconsin
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David Fahey
NOAA
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Linda Hunt
SSAI
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Jeffrey Mast
Texas A & M University