GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, VOL. 32, L19809,
doi:10.1029/2005GL023624, 2005
Anthropogenic greenhouse forcing and
strong water vapor feedback increase temperature in Europe
Rolf Philipona
Physikalisch-Meteorologisches Observatorium Davos, World Radiation Center,
Davos Dorf, Switzerland
Bruno Dürr
MeteoSwiss, Zürich,
Switzerland
Atsumu Ohmura
Institute for
Atmospheric and Climate Science, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
(ETH), Zürich, Switzerland
Christian Ruckstuhl
Institute for
Atmospheric and Climate Science, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
(ETH), Zürich, Switzerland
Abstract
Europe's temperature increases considerably faster than the
northern hemisphere average. Detailed month-by-month analyses show
temperature and humidity changes for individual months that are similar
for all Europe, indicating large-scale weather patterns uniformly
influencing temperature. However, superimposed to these changes a strong
west-east gradient is observed for all months. The gradual temperature and
humidity increases from west to east are not related to circulation but
must be due to non-uniform water vapour feedback. Surface radiation
measurements in central Europe manifest anthropogenic greenhouse forcing
and strong water vapor feedback, enhancing the forcing and temperature
rise by about a factor of three. Solar radiation decreases and changing
cloud amounts show small net radiative effects. However, high correlation
of increasing cloud-free longwave downward radiation with temperature (r
= 0.99) and absolute humidity (r = 0.89), and high correlation
between ERA-40 integrated water vapor and CRU surface temperature changes
(r = 0.84), demonstrates greenhouse forcing with strong water vapor
feedback.
Received 25 May 2005; accepted
17 August 2005; published
8 October 2005.
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