Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems (Jul 2024)

Effect of Uncertainty in Water Vapor Continuum Absorption on CO2 Forcing, Longwave Feedback, and Climate Sensitivity

  • Florian E. Roemer,
  • Stefan A. Buehler,
  • Lukas Kluft,
  • Robert Pincus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2023MS004157
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract We investigate the effect of uncertainty in water vapor continuum absorption at terrestrial wavenumbers on CO2 forcing F, longwave feedback λ, and climate sensitivity S at surface temperatures Ts between 270 and 330 K. We calculate this uncertainty using a line‐by‐line radiative‐transfer model and a single‐column atmospheric model, assuming a moist‐adiabatic temperature lapse‐rate and 80% relative humidity in the troposphere, an isothermal stratosphere, and clear skies. Due to the lack of a comprehensive model of continuum uncertainty, we represent continuum uncertainty in two different idealized approaches: In the first, we assume that the total continuum absorption is constrained at reference conditions; in the second, we assume that the total continuum absorption is constrained for all atmospheres in our model. In both approaches, we decrease the self continuum by 10% and adjust the foreign continuum accordingly. We find that continuum uncertainty mainly affects S through its effect on λ. In the first approach, continuum uncertainty mainly affects λ through a decrease in the total continuum absorption with Ts; in the second approach, continuum uncertainty affects λ through a vertical redistribution of continuum absorption. In both experiments, the effect of continuum uncertainty on S is modest at Ts = 288 K (≈0.02 K) but substantial at Ts ≥ 300 K (up to 0.2 K), because at high Ts, the effects of decreasing the self continuum and increasing the foreign continuum have the same sign. These results highlight the importance of a correct partitioning between self and foreign continuum to accurately determine the temperature dependence of Earth's climate sensitivity.

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