Modelling Arctic Sea Ice (part 3)
In part 1 and part 2 of this series we noticed that the time series for mean annual Arctic land surface temperature anomaly (LSA) was rather knobbly.
Periodic is the word I used and I suggested the period to be about 13 years, which is almost solar but not quite.
This morning we are going to take a closer look at those knobbles and see if there is indeed a connection to solar cycles, so I suggest something funky to sip like a ginger and lemon tea.
I am going to start out by plotting the standardised scores for LSA along with standardised scores for the mean daily sunspot number for the period 1900 – 2022.
These aren’t just any old sunspot numbers but the WDC-SILSO sunspot numbers held at the Royal Observatory of Belgium – you can grab these for yourself from this handy page.
Mean Daily Sunspot Number
For those not familiar with the mean daily sunspot number (SSN) I shall start by saying collecting and deriving this figure is the longest running scientific endeavour in the world. Here’s what Wiki has to say:
Astronomers have been observing the Sun recording information about sunspots since the advent of the telescope in 1609.
However, the idea of compiling the information about the sunspot number from various observers originates in Rudolf Wolf in 1848 in Zürich, Switzerland.
The produced series initially had his name, but now it is more commonly referred to as the international sunspot number series.
The international sunspot number series is still being produced today at the observatory of Brussels.
The international number series shows an approximate periodicity of 11 years, the solar cycle, which was first found by Heinrich Schwabe in 1843, thus sometimes it is also referred to as the Schwabe cycle.
The periodicity is not constant but varies roughly in the range 9.5 to 11 years.
The international sunspot number series extends back to 1700 with annual values while daily values exist only since 1818.
What happens on the ground is a whole bunch of observatories will have a go at counting the number of sunspots each day and report their sighting to the WDC-SILSO database who then compute the mean value of all daily observations.
Back in 1900 some 365 observatories provided a reading, whereas in 2022 some 14,273 observatories provided a reading, so the error associated with this measurement is very small indeed. The 365 (or 366) mean daily counts are then averaged over the year.
So let us have a look at those standardised scores not as they stand but as a first order differenced series. This sounds scary until you realise all we are doing is plotting out the year-to-year change in mean LSA and mean SSN instead of the absolute annual values.
Why so? Because plotting out the differenced series removes any underlying long-term trend and leaves only the jiggling about knobbly bits, making it easier to compare two knobbly time series. Try this:
Isn’t that fascinating? There are times when a bump in land surface temperature follows a bump in solar activity, and there are times when a bump in land surface temperature precedes a bump in solar activity. All in all my eyeballs suggest there may be a connection since the jigging about has a similar feel. We better settle this using that spanner again…
A Spanner Called Cross Correlation
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VOWG
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More computer models, hot diggity dog. They worked so well with “covid”.
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Koen Vogel
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An excellent post, though somewhat confusing, perhaps even to the author. Apparently climate change is not as simple as More CO2 More Temperature. But clear evidence that a) solar cycles play.a role but b) there is a confounding process and c) solar irradiation is not the confounding process. Very enlightening.The Arctic is a special case as it warms faster and more than the rest of the planet, and there may be a lag between Arctic and global heating.
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Paul
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I’ve been following the Electric Universe school of thinking for some decades now, and support the basic premise of everything is soaked in unimaginable amounts of electricity.
With that in mind, is it possible, plausible that the earth is one big thermal diode?
This creates the hot end, cold end, but that’s tempered with the tilt of the planet and where in the elliptic we are.
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Moffin
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Nikola Tesla, “If you want to find the secrets of the universe, think in terms of energy, frequency and vibration.”
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Herb Rose
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Hi Moffin,
Energy creates electricity by separating matter into positive and negative charges.
Herb
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Howdy
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In this case Herb, new age matters are being stated. The Vibrational frequency everything has, including people.
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Moffin
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Spot on Howdy. An example of frequency is the singers pitch to shatter a crystal glass and a slower frequency is the approx. 100,000 year eccentricity Milankovitch cycle.
Jerry Krause
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Hi Moffin and PSI Readers,
Sir Edmund Hillary stated something like the following which I read but now do not remember its reference and cannot cite ifs reference.
Rivers of dense, cold , air flows down snow covered rivers of Antarctica just rivers of liquid water would if the temperature was greater. Which I do not remember him as adding: JUST AS GLACIERS DO.
But I do remember him as stating the temperatures of these katabatic winds.
katabatic | ˌkadəˈbadik ,|adjective Meteorology, (of a wind) caused by local downward motion of cool air. (New Oxford American Dictionary). “Cool air” because the “cold air” is being warmed by adiabatic warming as the air rapidly flows to a lower elevation. However, this warming is limited (offset) because the extreme cold air of the high plateau is the result of a cloudless atmosphere which does hinder the surface’s emission’s transmission toward space.
Now I must add that the extremely cold atmosphere over the plateau drains from its upper most extent. Flushing any ozone in this Antarctica atmosphere, over the plateau, rapidly down to sea level.
Have a good day
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Herb Rose
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Hi Jerry,
The atmosphere exists because above absolute 0 the gas molecules absorb energy, convert to a gas, and then that gas expands. As the molecules absorb more energy the collisions between molecules transfer more energy causing expansion. When those gas molecules lose energy the gas contracts (moves towards the center of the Earth). This loss of energy does not cause the gas molecules to gain energy. The increase in temperature is due to more molecules (mass) transferring energy (momentum) to the thermometer. There is no adiabatic heating.
Your ozone statement is also crap. Ozone is an unstable molecule which will decompose into an oxygen molecule and an oxygen atom when it loses energy. The colder it is, the faster it decomposes and the shorter its lifespan..
Herb
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