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Detailed Reference Information |
Wild, M., Ohmura, A. and Makowski, K. (2007). Impact of global dimming and brightening on global warming. Geophysical Research Letters 34: doi: 10.1029/2006GL028031. issn: 0094-8276. |
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Speculations on the impact of variations in surface solar radiation on global warming range from concerns that solar dimming has largely masked the full magnitude of greenhouse warming, to claims that the recent reversal from solar dimming to brightening rather than the greenhouse effect was responsible for the observed warming. To disentangle surface solar and greenhouse influences on global warming, trends in diurnal temperature range are analyzed. They suggest that solar dimming was effective in masking greenhouse warming, but only up to the 1980s, when dimming gradually transformed into brightening. Since then, the uncovered greenhouse effect has revealed its full dimension, as manifested in a rapid temperature rise (+0.380C/decade over land since mid-1980s). Recent solar brightening cannot supersede the greenhouse effect as main cause of global warming, since land temperatures increased by 0.80C from 1960 to 2000, even though solar brightening did not fully outweigh solar dimming within this period. |
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Abstract |
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Keywords
Atmospheric Composition and Structure, Radiation, transmission and scattering, Global Change, Atmosphere (0315, 0325), Global Change, Climate dynamics (0429, 3309), Atmospheric Processes, Climate change and variability (1616, 1635, 3309, 4215, 4513), Atmospheric Processes, Radiative processes |
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Publisher
American Geophysical Union 2000 Florida Avenue N.W. Washington, D.C. 20009-1277 USA 1-202-462-6900 1-202-328-0566 service@agu.org |
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