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Featured researches published by K. Lo.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Global temperature change

James E. Hansen; Makiko Sato; Reto Ruedy; K. Lo; David W. Lea; Martin Medina-Elizade

Global surface temperature has increased ≈0.2°C per decade in the past 30 years, similar to the warming rate predicted in the 1980s in initial global climate model simulations with transient greenhouse gas changes. Warming is larger in the Western Equatorial Pacific than in the Eastern Equatorial Pacific over the past century, and we suggest that the increased West–East temperature gradient may have increased the likelihood of strong El Niños, such as those of 1983 and 1998. Comparison of measured sea surface temperatures in the Western Pacific with paleoclimate data suggests that this critical ocean region, and probably the planet as a whole, is approximately as warm now as at the Holocene maximum and within ≈1°C of the maximum temperature of the past million years. We conclude that global warming of more than ≈1°C, relative to 2000, will constitute “dangerous” climate change as judged from likely effects on sea level and extermination of species.


Climate Dynamics | 2007

Climate simulations for 1880–2003 with GISS modelE

James E. Hansen; Makiko Sato; Reto Ruedy; Pushker A. Kharecha; Andrew A. Lacis; Ron L. Miller; Larissa Nazarenko; K. Lo; Gavin A. Schmidt; Gary L. Russell; Igor Aleinov; Susanne E. Bauer; E. Baum; Brian Cairns; V. M. Canuto; Mark A. Chandler; Y. Cheng; Armond Cohen; A. D. Del Genio; G. Faluvegi; Eric L. Fleming; Andrew D. Friend; Timothy M. Hall; Charles H. Jackman; Jeffrey Jonas; Maxwell Kelley; Nancy Y. Kiang; D. Koch; Gordon Labow; J. Lerner

We carry out climate simulations for 1880–2003 with GISS modelE driven by ten measured or estimated climate forcings. An ensemble of climate model runs is carried out for each forcing acting individually and for all forcing mechanisms acting together. We compare side-by-side simulated climate change for each forcing, all forcings, observations, unforced variability among model ensemble members, and, if available, observed variability. Discrepancies between observations and simulations with all forcings are due to model deficiencies, inaccurate or incomplete forcings, and imperfect observations. Although there are notable discrepancies between model and observations, the fidelity is sufficient to encourage use of the model for simulations of future climate change. By using a fixed well-documented model and accurately defining the 1880–2003 forcings, we aim to provide a benchmark against which the effect of improvements in the model, climate forcings, and observations can be tested. Principal model deficiencies include unrealistically weak tropical El Nino-like variability and a poor distribution of sea ice, with too much sea ice in the Northern Hemisphere and too little in the Southern Hemisphere. Greatest uncertainties in the forcings are the temporal and spatial variations of anthropogenic aerosols and their indirect effects on clouds.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1997

Forcings and chaos in interannual to decadal climate change

James E. Hansen; Makiko Sato; Reto Ruedy; A. Lacis; K. Asamoah; K. Beckford; S. Borenstein; Erik T. Brown; Brian Cairns; Barbara E. Carlson; B. Curran; S. de Castro; Leonard M. Druyan; P. Etwarrow; T. Ferede; M. Fox; Dian J. Gaffen; J. Glascoe; Howard R. Gordon; S. M. Hollandsworth; X. Jiang; Colin A. Johnson; N. Lawrence; Judith Lean; J. Lerner; K. Lo; Jennifer A. Logan; A. Luckett; M. P. McCormick; Richard D. McPeters

We investigate the roles of climate forcings and chaos (unforced variability) in climate change via ensembles of climate simulations in which we add forcings one by one. The experiments suggest that most interannual climate variability in the period 1979–1996 at middle and high latitudes is chaotic. But observed SST anomalies, which themselves are partly forced and partly chaotic, account for much of the climate variability at low latitudes and a small portion of the variability at high latitudes. Both a natural radiative forcing (volcanic aerosols) and an anthropogenic forcing (ozone depletion) leave clear signatures in the simulated climate change that are identified in observations. Pinatubo aerosols warm the stratosphere and cool the surface globally, causing a tendency for regional surface cooling. Ozone depletion cools the lower stratosphere, troposphere and surface, steepening the temperature lapse rate in the troposphere. Solar irradiance effects are small, but our model is inadequate to fully explore this forcing. Well-mixed anthropogenic greenhouse gases cause a large surface wanning that, over the 17 years, approximately offsets cooling by the other three mechanisms. Thus the net calculated effect of all measured radiative forcings is approximately zero surface temperature trend and zero heat storage in the ocean for the period 1979–1996. Finally, in addition to the four measured radiative forcings, we add an initial (1979) disequilibrium forcing of +0.65 W/m2. This forcing yields a global surface warming of about 0.2°C over 1979–1996, close to observations, and measurable heat storage in the ocean. We argue that the results represent evidence of a planetary radiative imbalance of at least 0.5° W/m2; this disequilibrium presumably represents unrealized wanning due to changes of atmospheric composition prior to 1979. One implication of the disequilibrium forcing is an expectation of new record global temperatures in the next few years. The best opportunity for observational confirmation of the disequilibrium is measurement of ocean temperatures adequate to define heat storage.


Reviews of Geophysics | 2010

GLOBAL SURFACE TEMPERATURE CHANGE

James E. Hansen; Reto Ruedy; Makiko Sato; K. Lo


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2005

Efficacy of climate forcings

James E. Hansen; Makiko Sato; Reto Ruedy; Larissa Nazarenko; Andrew A. Lacis; Gavin A. Schmidt; Gary L. Russell; Igor Aleinov; Michael Bauer; Susanne E. Bauer; N. Bell; Brian Cairns; V. M. Canuto; Mark A. Chandler; Y. Cheng; A. D. Del Genio; G. Faluvegi; Eric L. Fleming; Andrew D. Friend; Timothy M. Hall; Charles H. Jackman; Maxwell Kelley; Nancy Y. Kiang; D. Koch; Judith Lean; J. Lerner; K. Lo; Surabi Menon; Ron L. Miller; Patrick Minnis


Science | 2005

Earth's Energy Imbalance: Confirmation and Implications

James E. Hansen; Larissa Nazarenko; Reto Ruedy; Makiko Sato; Josh K. Willis; Anthony D. Del Genio; D. Koch; Andrew A. Lacis; K. Lo; Surabi Menon; T. Novakov; Judith Perlwitz; Gary L. Russell; Gavin A. Schmidt; Nicholas Tausnev


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1996

Cloud Feedback in Atmospheric General Circulation Models: An Update

Robert D. Cess; Minghua Zhang; William Ingram; Gerald L. Potter; V. Alekseev; Howard W. Barker; E. Cohen-Solal; R. A. Colman; D. A. Dazlich; A. D. Del Genio; M. R. Dix; V. Dymnikov; Monika Esch; Laura D. Fowler; J. R. Fraser; V. Galin; W. L. Gates; James J. Hack; Jeffrey T. Kiehl; H. Le Treut; K. Lo; B. J. McAvaney; V. P. Meleshko; J.-J. Morcrette; David A. Randall; Erich Roeckner; J.-F. Royer; Michael E. Schlesinger; P. V. Sporyshev; B. Timbal


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2006

Dangerous human-made interference with climate: a GISS modelE study

James E. Hansen; Makiko Sato; Reto Ruedy; Pushker A. Kharecha; Andrew A. Lacis; Ron L. Miller; Larissa Nazarenko; K. Lo; Gavin A. Schmidt; Gary L. Russell; Igor Aleinov; Susanne E. Bauer; E. Baum; Brian Cairns; V. M. Canuto; Mark A. Chandler; Y. Cheng; Albert Cohen; A. D. Del Genio; G. Faluvegi; Eric L. Fleming; Andrew D. Friend; Timothy M. Hall; Charles H. Jackman; Jeffrey Jonas; Maxwell Kelley; Nancy Y. Kiang; D. Koch; Gordon Labow; J. Lerner


Science | 2002

Global Warming Continues

James E. Hansen; Reto Ruedy; Makiko Sato; K. Lo


Archive | 2008

2008 Global Surface Temperature in GISS Analysis

James E. Hansen; Makiko Sato; Reto Ruedy; K. Lo

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Reto Ruedy

Goddard Institute for Space Studies

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Andrew A. Lacis

Goddard Institute for Space Studies

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Brian Cairns

Goddard Institute for Space Studies

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A. D. Del Genio

Goddard Institute for Space Studies

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Gary L. Russell

Goddard Institute for Space Studies

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Gavin A. Schmidt

Goddard Institute for Space Studies

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