Results 181 to 190 of about 63,736 (296)

Quantifying Equilibrium Climate Sensitivity to Atmospheric Chemistry and Composition Representations in GFDL‐CM4.0 and GFDL‐ESM4.1

open access: yesGeophysical Research Letters, Volume 53, Issue 5, 16 March 2026.
Abstract Equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS) quantifies surface warming in response to doubled pre‐industrial CO2 (2xCO2). Uncertainty in estimates arises from diverse model representations and climate‐chemistry feedbacks. We quantify ECS with five atmospheric chemistry‐composition model representations (sea salt, dust, organics, ozone, sea ice ...
L. T. Sentman   +6 more
wiley   +1 more source

Assimilation of high-resolution Ocean Color Monitor (OCM) aerosol optical depth in WRF-Chem improves PM₂.₅ forecasts over the Indian region. [PDF]

open access: yesSci Rep
Yadav PP   +10 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Hemispheric Synoptic Patterns Control Rainfall and Long‐Range Aerosol Transport in the Amazon

open access: yesGeophysical Research Letters, Volume 53, Issue 5, 16 March 2026.
Abstract The transatlantic transport of dust and smoke aerosols from Africa to South America is a large‐scale, year‐round process that affects atmospheric and nutrient cycling in the Amazon rainforest. We analyze daily variations in black carbon at the Amazon Tall Tower Observatory (ATTO) to investigate how Atlantic synoptic‐scale meteorology ...
Luiz A. T. Machado   +6 more
wiley   +1 more source

Three Centuries of ENSO Variability Inferred From Muna, Sulawesi, Indonesia Teak δ18O: Limited Response to Radiative Forcing

open access: yesGeophysical Research Letters, Volume 53, Issue 5, 16 March 2026.
Abstract We present an annual resolution oxygen isotope anomaly (Δδ18 ${\Delta }{\delta }^{18}$Oc) record, derived from eight teak (Tectona grandis L.f.) tree ring‐dated δ18 ${\delta }^{18}$Oc series from Muna, Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia (5.3° ${}^{\circ}$S, 123° ${}^{\circ}$E).
M. N. Evans   +7 more
wiley   +1 more source

Global Warming Has Accelerated Significantly

open access: yesGeophysical Research Letters, Volume 53, Issue 5, 16 March 2026.
Abstract Recent record‐hot years have caused discussion over whether global warming has accelerated. Previous analysis found acceleration (i.e., increase in warming rate) has not yet reached a 95% confidence level, given natural temperature variability. We remove the estimated influence of three main natural variability factors: El Niño, volcanism, and
G. Foster, S. Rahmstorf
wiley   +1 more source

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