A Dynamically Consistent ENsemble of Temperature at the Earth surface since 1850 from the DCENT dataset
A Dynamically Consistent ENsemble of Temperature at the Earth surface since 1850 from the DCENT dataset
Accurate historical records of Earth’s surface temperatures are central to climate research and policy development. Widely- used estimates based on instrumental measurements from land and sea are, however, not fully consistent at either global or regional scales. To address these challenges, we develop the Dynamically Consistent ENsemble of Temperature (DCENT), a 200-member ensemble of monthly surface temperature anomalies relative to the 1982–2014 climatology. Each DCENT member starts from 1850 and has a 5⇥5 resolution. DCENT leverages several updated or recently-developed approaches of data homogenization and bias adjustments: an optimized pairwise homogenization algorithm for identifying breakpoints in land surface air temperature records, a physics-informed inter-comparison method to adjust systematic offsets in sea-surface temperatures recorded by ships, and a coupled energy balance model to homogenize continental and marine records. Each approach was published individually, and this paper describes a combined approach and its application in developing a gridded analysis. A notable difference of DCENT relative to existing temperature estimates is a cooler baseline for 1850–1900 that implies greater historical warming.
Chan, Duo
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Gebbie, Geoffrey
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Huybers, Peter
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Kent, Elizabeth C.
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Chan, Duo
4c1278dc-7f39-4b67-b1cd-3f81f55f4906
Gebbie, Geoffrey
b175e22b-563d-4925-9649-1eb980c2a315
Huybers, Peter
48e9a517-aa2a-40f1-96ef-06d76b19291c
Kent, Elizabeth C.
59bfb484-c094-43a7-8d2a-4d0a4357eeeb
Chan, Duo, Gebbie, Geoffrey, Huybers, Peter and Kent, Elizabeth C.
(2024)
A Dynamically Consistent ENsemble of Temperature at the Earth surface since 1850 from the DCENT dataset.
Scientific Data, [953].
(doi:10.1038/s41597-024-03742-x).
Abstract
Accurate historical records of Earth’s surface temperatures are central to climate research and policy development. Widely- used estimates based on instrumental measurements from land and sea are, however, not fully consistent at either global or regional scales. To address these challenges, we develop the Dynamically Consistent ENsemble of Temperature (DCENT), a 200-member ensemble of monthly surface temperature anomalies relative to the 1982–2014 climatology. Each DCENT member starts from 1850 and has a 5⇥5 resolution. DCENT leverages several updated or recently-developed approaches of data homogenization and bias adjustments: an optimized pairwise homogenization algorithm for identifying breakpoints in land surface air temperature records, a physics-informed inter-comparison method to adjust systematic offsets in sea-surface temperatures recorded by ships, and a coupled energy balance model to homogenize continental and marine records. Each approach was published individually, and this paper describes a combined approach and its application in developing a gridded analysis. A notable difference of DCENT relative to existing temperature estimates is a cooler baseline for 1850–1900 that implies greater historical warming.
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s41597-024-03742-x
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Accepted/In Press date: 5 August 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 August 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 494022
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494022
ISSN: 2052-4463
PURE UUID: 83a93225-4e03-49ad-9c23-3f4a814f8bf9
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Date deposited: 19 Sep 2024 16:49
Last modified: 21 Sep 2024 02:12
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Author:
Duo Chan
Author:
Geoffrey Gebbie
Author:
Peter Huybers
Author:
Elizabeth C. Kent
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