3D climate simulations of the Archean find that methane has a strong cooling effect at high concentrations (dataset)
Eager-Nash, Jake Kazu; Mayne, Nathan; Nicholson, Arwen; et al.Prins, Janke; Young, Oakley; Daines, Stuart; Sergeev, Denis; Lambert, Hugo; Manners, James; Boutle, Ian; Wolf, Eric; Kamp, Inga; Kohary, Krisztian; Lenton, Tim
Date: 24 November 2022
Publisher
University of Exeter
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Abstract
Methane is thought to have been an important greenhouse gas during the Archean, although its potential warming has been found to be limited at high concentrations due to its high shortwave absorption. We use the Met Office Unified Model, a general circulation model, to further explore the climatic effect of different Archean methane ...
Methane is thought to have been an important greenhouse gas during the Archean, although its potential warming has been found to be limited at high concentrations due to its high shortwave absorption. We use the Met Office Unified Model, a general circulation model, to further explore the climatic effect of different Archean methane concentrations. Surface warming peaks at a pressure ratio pCH4:pCO2 of approximately 0.1, reaching a maximum of up to 7\,K before significant cooling above this ratio. Equator-to-pole temperature differences also tend to increase up to pCH4≤300 Pa, which is driven by a difference in radiative forcing at the equator and poles by methane and a reduction in the latitudinal extend of the Hadley circulation. 3D models are important to fully capture the cooling effect of methane, due to these impacts of the circulation.
Physics and Astronomy
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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