Skip to main content
dPanther Home
|
Sea Level Rise
mydPanther Home
Technical Summary
Item menu
Print
Send
Add
Share
Description
Standard View
MARC View
Metadata
Usage Statistics
PDF
Downloads
STANDARD VIEW
MARC VIEW
METADATA
USAGE STATISTICS
Permanent Link:
http://dpanther.fiu.edu/dpService/dpPurlService/purl/FI15042590/00001
Material Information
Title:
Technical Summary
Series Title:
Climate Change 2007
Creator:
Susan Solomon
Dahe Qin
Martin Manning
Richard B.Alley
Terje Berntsen
Nathaniel L. Bindoff
Zhenlin Chen
Amnat Chidthalsong
Jonathan M.Gregory
Gabriele C. Hegerl
Martin Helmann
Bruce Hewitson
Brian J. Hoskins
Fortunat Joos
Jean Jouzel
Ulrike Lohmann
Vladimir Kattsov
Taroh Matsuno
Mario Molina
Neville Nicholls
Jonathan Overpeck
Graciela Raga
Venkatachalam Ramaswamy
Jiawen Ren
Matilde Rusticucci
Richard Somerville
Thomas F. Stocker
Ronald J. Stouffer
Penny Whetton
Richard A. Wood
David Wratt
Kansri Boonpragob
(
Editor
)
Filippo Giorgi
(
Editor
)
Bubu Pateh Jallow
(
Editor
)
Place of Publication:
Cambridge, United Kingdom
New York, NY
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Publication Date:
2007
Language:
English
Subjects
Subjects / Keywords:
climate change
science--research
greenhouse gases
environmental policy
Notes
Abstract:
In the six years since the IPCC’s Third Assessment Report (TAR), signifi cant progress has been made in understanding past and recent climate change and in projecting future changes. These advances have arisen from large amounts of new data, more sophisticated analyses of data, improvements in the understanding and simulation of physical processes in climate models and more extensive exploration of uncertainty ranges in model results. The increased confi dence in climate science provided by these developments is evident in this Working Group I contribution to the IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report. While this report provides new and important policyrelevant information on the scientifi c understanding of climate change, the complexity of the climate system and the multiple interactions that determine its behaviour impose limitations on our ability to understand fully the future course of Earth’s global climate. There is still an incomplete physical understanding of many components of the climate system and their role in climate change. Key uncertainties include aspects of the roles played by clouds, the cryosphere, the oceans, land use and couplings between climate and biogeochemical cycles. The areas of science covered in this report continue to undergo rapid progress and it should be recognised that the present assessment refl ects scientifi c understanding based on the peer-reviewed literature available in mid-2006. The key fi ndings of the IPCC Working Group I assessment are presented in the Summary for Policymakers. This Technical Summary provides a more detailed overview of the scientifi c basis for those fi ndings and provides a road map to the chapters of the underlying report. It focuses on key fi ndings, highlighting what is new since the TAR. The structure of the Technical Summary is as follows: • Section 2: an overview of current scientifi c understanding of the natural and anthropogenic drivers of changes in climate; • Section 3: an overview of observed changes in the climate system (including the atmosphere, oceans and cryosphere) and their relationships to physical processes; • Section 4: an overview of explanations of observed climate changes based on climate models and physical understanding, the extent to which climate change can be attributed to specifi c causes and a new evaluation of climate sensitivity to greenhouse gas increases; • Section 5: an overview of projections for both nearand far-term climate changes including the time scales of responses to changes in forcing, and probabilistic information about future climate change; and • Section 6: a summary of the most robust fi ndings and the key uncertainties in current understanding of physical climate change science. Each paragraph in the Technical Summary reporting substantive results is followed by a reference in curly brackets to the corresponding chapter section(s) of the underlying report where the detailed assessment of the scientifi c literature and additional information can be found ( English )
Record Information
Source Institution:
Florida International University
Rights Management:
Please contact the owning institution for licensing and permissions. It is the user's responsibility to ensure use does not violate any third party rights.
dpSobek Membership
Aggregations:
Sea Level Rise
***This is default web skin for this SobekCM digital library.
Developed for the
University of Florida Digital Collections
For any questions about this system, email
Mark.V.Sullivan@gmail.com
Last updated January 2012 -
4.10.1