Climate Change Sceptics Using Bad Data |
| Written by spacetravel.org | |||
| Saturday, 20 August 2005 22:42 | |||
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Now, Carl Mears and Frank Wentz of Remote Sensing Systems in Santa Rosa, California, have found that satellite drift may be responsible for giving the impression that the troposphere is cooling. The satellite is supposed to take measurements at the same time every day while it passes over the equator. This was around 2 pm local time at first, but it was crossing the equator at 5 pm after two years. The fact that it is cooler at 5 pm than at 2 pm was biasing the results. Once a correction for satellite drift was made, the revised data showed that the troposphere is warming. Weather balloon data has also showed a discrepancy with global warming models. However, Steven Sherwood of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, and his colleagues have shown that balloon measurements are also unreliable. Over the years, researchers developed new ways to shield temperature sensors from direct sunlight. However, they rarely bothered to make a note of this shielding, or calculate how it would affect raw data. Sherwoods team found that improved shielding caused the sensors to record a drop in temperature, which can explain why weather balloons have recorded a trend of declining temperature in the troposphere. Christy has reanalysed his data, using the information from Mears and Wentzs study, and has found that the Earth is warming about 1.23ºC per century. Mears and Wentz have calculated that the Earth is warming at about 1.9ºC per century.
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