Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide and Global Temperature

Increasing carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations in the atmosphere have led to rising temperatures on earth. This climate change is undoubtedly induced by man-made (so-called anthropogeneous) emissions of greenhouse gases: they alter the balance of incoming visible solar radiation versus outgoing radiation in the infrared that is increasingly absorbed in the atmosphere.

Zoom Sign
CO2 time-series in the atmosphere

Monthly averaged atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations (green and red curves) and moving average (black line) measured from 1960 to 2007.
Source: NOAA

Zoom Sign
Mean global temperature anomaly

Global temperature anomaly at 10 m above land and ocean surface between 1880 and 2008, with the mean temperature in the period of 1951-1980 as a reference (0°C temperature anomaly).
Source: NASA

The graph shown on the left above shows a time-series of monthly averaged atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations on the northern hemisphere, measured from 1960 to 2007 at the Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawaii. Oscillations seen in the green and red curves are from seasonal variations of vegetation productivity. The black curve is a moving annual average where the seasonal fluctuations are no longer visible.

The graph to the right above shows the global temperature anomaly at 10 m above land and ocean surface between 1880 and 2008. The mean temperature in the period of 1951-1980 serves as a reference (0° temperature anomaly). Black dots represent mean temperatures in the respective year, the red line denotes a moving average over the annual temperatures. Green error bars denote the uncertainty of data. From 1951-1980 there was no remarkable trend in temperature increase. This was due to increasing atmospheric pollution with aerosols that reflected sunlight efficiently back to space, thus reducing the energy input at visible wavelengths. Later on, waste regulations have lead to a reduction of atmospheric pollution.

Scenario

Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration and atmospheric temperatures near the ground appear to be closely related over the past 50 years. You are planning to predict the evolution of atmospheric temperature in the 21st century.

Questions

  1. What causes the fluctuations of the carbon dioxide curve (graph left above, green and red lines) around the moving average (black line)? Please check if these fluctuations have an annual periodicity.

  2. The carbon dioxide data were (and still are) measured at a station in Hawaii, i.e., on the northern hemisphere. Would you expect a seasonal shift of the fluctuations when measured at a station on the southern hemisphere?

  3. Please take values of averaged carbon dioxide and temperature data from the graphs over the period of 1960-2005 at 5-years intervals and sketch the data points of carbon dioxide versus temperature in a diagram. Is there an apparent linear trend of data points which can be approximated with a best-fit straight line? Calculate a best-fit straight line using equations that you will find in the tutorial Time Series Analysis, chapter 2, page 4. Please calculate also the correlation coefficient using the equations given there; it describes in which quality the modelled best-fit line represents the data points.

  4. Extrapolate the carbon dioxide curve over the time lapse of the 21st century. Extrapolate also your diagram of carbon dioxide versus temperature data up to the carbon dioxide concentration expected to exist by the end of the century. Which atmospheric temperature do you estimate? Find pros and cons for such extrapolations of trends.

Time needed:

Proposed procedure:

  1. First lesson in class: Students get together in groups of no more than five students and

    • discuss the questions about carbon dioxide concentrations and temperature increase,
    • decide which background information they may need to solve the problem, and
    • assign a task to each member of their group which should be resolved by the time of the next lesson in school.

  2. Homework: Students resolve the tasks that have been assigned to them by their group.

  3. Second lesson in class: Students

    • present what they have learned to their group
    • discuss how their findings can help them to answer question 4, i.e. forecast of future atmospheric temperatures
    • present their results in class using the information found in their enquiries.

Material needed

Background Information