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91探花
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Professor Myles Allen CBE FRS

Statutory Professor

Research theme

  • Climate physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics
Myles.Allen@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72085,01865 (2)75895
Atmospheric Physics Clarendon Laboratory, room 109
  • About
  • Publications

Estimating signal amplitudes in optimal fingerprinting, part I: theory

Climate Dynamics 21 (2003) 477-491

Authors:

MR Allen, Peter A. Stott

Estimating signal amplitudes in optimal fingerprinting. Part II: application to general circulation models

Climate Dynamics Springer Nature 21:5-6 (2003) 493-500

Authors:

PA Stott, MR Allen, GS Jones

Climate forecasting: possible or probable?

Nature 425:6955 (2003) 242

Liability for climate change

Nature Springer Nature 421:6926 (2003) 891-892

Modelling the atmospheric response to doubled CO2 and depleted stratospheric ozone using a stratosphere-resolving coupled GCM

Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 129:589 PART C (2003) 947-966

Authors:

NP Gillett, MR Allen, KD Williams

Abstract:

We investigate the atmospheric response to doubled CO2 and stratospheric ozone depletion in three versions of a general-circulation model with differing vertical resolution and upper-boundary heights. We find that an approximate doubling of the vertical resolution below 10 hPa reduces the temperature response to a doubling of CO2 from 3.4 K to 2.5 K. Much of this difference is associated with changes in the cloud response. All model versions show an increase in the Arctic Oscillation index in response to a doubling of CO2, but the increase is no larger in the model with an upper boundary at 0.01 hPa than in the standard model with a top level at 5 hPa. All models also show general stratospheric cooling in response to doubling CO2. However, unlike some other authors, we find no cooling in the Arctic winter vortex below around 10 hPa in the stratosphere-resolving model, and a weakening of the zonal winds throughout this region. This effect is due to enhanced upward propagation of planetary waves from the troposphere, and is an effect found only in the northern hemisphere, probably because of its larger zonal asymmetries. All models show a small but significant surface cooling in response to a reconstruction of 1998 stratospheric ozone depletion, and an increase in the Antarctic Oscillation index in the southern summer. The cooling extends through most of the atmosphere, and reaches a maximum in the region of the Antarctic ozone hole in November and December.

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