Ray, Bart and Eli
Back there on the Andy Lacis provides a good answer thread Ray Pierrehumbert said
raypierre said...
- A slightly more mathematical way of putting it is that in the absence of
trends in forcing, the temperature is not brownian motion (random walk)
but something more like an AR(1) process, with a tendency for the state
to relax back to an equilibrium with a certain time constant. What's
more, that time constant is proportional to the climate sensitivity, so
if somebody is arguing for large natural fluctuations, they are
simultaneously arguing for high climate sensitivity. It's all a
consequence of the key role of top-of-atmosphere energy balance.
Of course, the linear AR(1) process is not a good quantitative fit to the real climate system, since one has multiple time scales of ocean heat uptake, plus various nonlinearities. But it does serve to connect the natural variability issue with the climate sensitivity issue
Raypierre,
You wrote that, after an unforced change in climate state, there isNow Eli might venture out on the thin ice (have the bunnies noticed the Arctic Ice Disappearance Act?) and note that at least for the fast feedbacks the system is tightly coupled, so that with the exception of solar each forcing couples back and becomes a feedback only, as Jay Zimmerman points out, being limited by the Stefan Boltzman law, therefore, QED the larger any single feedback, the faster the system returns to equilibrium and the larger the overshoot, because it ain't gonna be a soft landing.
"a tendency for the state to relax back to an equilibrium with a certain time constant. What's more, that time constant is proportional to the climate sensitivity"
Intuitively it makes sense that if a random change can push the system far away from its equilibrium, it must mean the system is very sensitive to any changes in state (whether forced or unforced), but I don't quite grasp the explanation you gave that the timescale of equilibration is proportional to climate sensitivity. Could you elaborate?
Bart
PS: On local and global scales the driving negative feedbacks are IEHO convection and radiation.
Also some fine poetry there abouts
-- by Horatio Algeranon
ARy traipses
On airy mesas
Will put you on your butte
But random spills
Down random hills
Will ruin your new suit
With AR(2) it was still brand new
I use AR(3) for rings of a tree
And AR(4) for much, much more
Then with AR(5) I was really alive
But that AR(6), it's just clever as clever
I think I'll use AR(6) forever and ever