Improved estimates of ocean heat content from 1960 to 2015
Abstract
Earth’s
energy imbalance (EEI) drives the ongoing global warming and can best
be assessed across the historical record (that is, since 1960) from
ocean heat content (OHC) changes. An accurate assessment of OHC is a
challenge, mainly because of insufficient and irregular data coverage.
We provide updated OHC estimates with the goal of minimizing associated
sampling error. We performed a subsample test, in which subsets of data
during the data-rich Argo era are colocated with locations of earlier
ocean observations, to quantify this error. Our results provide a new
OHC estimate with an unbiased mean sampling error and with variability
on decadal and multidecadal time scales (signal) that can be reliably
distinguished from sampling error (noise) with signal-to-noise ratios
higher than 3. The inferred integrated EEI is greater than that reported
in previous assessments and is consistent with a reconstruction of the
radiative imbalance at the top of atmosphere starting in 1985. We found
that changes in OHC are relatively small before about 1980; since then,
OHC has increased fairly steadily and, since 1990, has increasingly
involved deeper layers of the ocean. In addition, OHC changes in six
major oceans are reliable on decadal time scales. All ocean basins
examined have experienced significant warming since 1998, with the
greatest warming in the southern oceans, the tropical/subtropical
Pacific Ocean, and the tropical/subtropical Atlantic Ocean. This new
look at OHC and EEI changes over time provides greater confidence than
previously possible, and the data sets produced are a valuable resource
for further study.
http://advances.sciencemag.org/content/3/3/e1601545
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