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Science and Ideas Group - Fingerprinting the Climate System

When:
Thursday, June 08, 2023, 3:00 PM until 4:30 PM
Where:
via Zoom - details below:
CA  
Additional Info:
Event Contact(s):
Joseph D Evinger
Category:
Interest Group
Registration is recommended
Payment In Full In Advance Only
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RSVP:  Joseph Evinger (jdevinger@comcast.net)

When: Every 2nd Thursday of the month, 3:00-4:30 pm

Where: Zoomhttps://us02web.zoom.us/j/84801461083?pwd=elp5eDJ3V0F4bUhUVzFwS2MzWm1oZz09

Meeting ID: 848 0146 1083
Passcode: science

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Meeting ID: 848 0146 1083 

Open to: All


Science and Ideas Group Presents 
Fingerprinting the Climate System

Presenter: Ben Santer, PhD Climatology. Fowler Distinguished Scholar in Residence at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and a Visiting Researcher at UCLA’s Joint Institute for Regional Earth System Science & Engineering.


Description of talk:
Fingerprint research seeks to improve understanding of the nature and causes of climate change. The basic strategy is to search in observed climate records for the patterns of climate change (the “fingerprints”) predicted by a computer model. Fingerprint studies exploit the fact that different factors affecting climate have different characteristic signatures. These unique attributes are clearer in detailed patterns of climate change than in records like the average temperature of Earth’s surface. Fingerprinting is a powerful tool for separating human and natural climate-change signals. Results from this research provide scientific support for findings of a “discernible human influence” on global climate and contributed to work recognized by the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physics. My presentation will look back at over two decades of efforts to understand the causes of climate change with fingerprint methods. It will also address some of the key scientific challenges ahead, particularly in terms of communicating climate change science and assessing human contributions to the changing likelihood of extreme events.

 

Short biography: Ben Santer is an atmospheric scientist. He recently retired from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. He is now a Fowler Distinguished Scholar in Residence at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and a Visiting Researcher at UCLA’s Joint Institute for Regional Earth System Science & Engineering. He studies natural and human “fingerprints” in observed climate records. His early research contributed to the historic 1995 conclusion of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change: “the balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate”. He served as lead author of a key chapter of that report. Since 1995, Ben has identified human fingerprints in atmospheric temperature and water vapor, ocean heat content, sea surface temperature in hurricane formation regions, and many other climate variables. In his spare time, Ben is an avid rock-climber and mountaineer.




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