Results 1 to 10 of about 198 (160)
The rigorous adjustment of the global mean sea level budget during 2005–2015
Global mean sea level budget is rigorously adjusted during the period 2005–2015. The emphasis is to provide the best estimates for the linear rates of changes (trends) of the global mean sea level budget components during this period subject to the ...
H. Bâki Iz, T.Y. Yang, C.K. Shum
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The global mean sea level rise predicted by its causative budget components during 2018 – 2050
This study establishes a predictive empirical model, the first of its kind, which is innately a cause-and-effect representation of the observed global mean sea level over time.
H. Bâki Iz
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Sub- and super-harmonics of luni-solar forcing are proxies for the natural variations in sea levels observed at tide gauge stations with long records as demonstrated in earlier studies.
Iz H. Bâki
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Kinematics of global mean thermosteric sea level during 1993–2019
Because oceans cover 71% of Earth’s surface, ocean warming, consequential for thermal expansion of sea water, has been the largest contributor to the global mean sea level rise averaged over the 20th and the early 21st century. This study first generates
İz H. Bâki
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Global mean sea level budget is rigorously adjusted during the period 2005–2015 with an emphasis on closing the budget on a year by year basis as opposed to using linear trends of global mean sea level components.
Iz H. Bâki, Shum C. K.
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A statistical protocol for a holistic adjustment of global sea level budget
Current studies in global mean sea level, GMSL, studies assess the closure/misclosure of the GMSL budget components and their uncertainties. Because Earth’s hydrosphere conserves water, a closed global mean sea level budget with a consistent set of ...
Iz H. Bâki, Shum C. K.
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A new assessment of the error budget of global mean sea level rate estimated by satellite altimetry over 1993–2008 [PDF]
A new error budget assessment of the global Mean Sea Level (MSL) determined by TOPEX/Poseidon and Jason-1 altimeter satellites between January 1993 and June 2008 is presented using last altimeter standards.
M. Ablain +3 more
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Present-day global mean sea level rise is caused by ocean thermal expansion, ice mass loss from glaciers and ice sheets, as well as changes in terrestrial water storage.
Anny Cazenave +19 more
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The Eastern Mediterranean Sea mean sea level decadal slowdown: the effects of the water budget
This paper analyses the decadal variability of the Mean Sea Level (MSL) trend for the Mediterranean Sea and three subregions using a combination of satellite altimetry, tide gauges and reanalyses datasets for the past 30 years (1993–2022).
Federica Borile +16 more
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Regionalizing the sea-level budget with machine learning techniques [PDF]
Attribution of sea-level change to its different drivers is typically done using a sea-level budget approach. While the global mean sea-level budget is considered closed, closing the budget on a finer spatial scale is more complicated due to, for ...
C. M. L. Camargo +8 more
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