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Examination of the Armagh Observatory Annual Mean Temperature Record, 1844–2004

NASA/TP-2006-214434, Wilson, Robert M. and Hathaway, David H., Examination of the Armagh Observatory Annual Mean Temperature Record, 1844–2004, George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, Marshall Space Flight Center, Alabama 35812, July 2006, pp. 24, Format(s): PDF 649k

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The long-term annual mean temperature record (1844–2004) of the Armagh Observatory (Armagh, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom) is examined for evidence of systematic variation, in particular, as related to solar/geomagnetic forcing and secular variation. Indeed, both are apparent in the temperature record. Moving averages for 10 years of temperature are found to highly correlate against both 10-year moving averages of the aa-geomagnetic index and sunspot number, having correlation coefficients of ≈0.7, inferring that nearly half the variance in the 10-year moving average of temperature can be explained by solar/geomagnetic forcing. The residuals appear episodic in nature, with cooling seen in the 1880s and again near 1980. Seven of the last 10 years of the temperature record has exceeded 10 °C, unprecedented in the overall record. Variation of sunspot cyclic averages and 2-cycle moving averages of temperature strongly associate with similar averages for the solar/geomagnetic cycle, with the residuals displaying an apparent 9-cycle variation and a steep rise in temperature associated with cycle 23. Hale cycle averages of temperature for even-odd pairs of sunspot cycles correlate against similar averages for the solar/geomagnetic cycle and, especially, against the length of the Hale cycle. Indications are that annual mean temperature will likely exceed 10 °C over the next decade.
Keywords:armagh observatory, temperature records, climatic change, global warming,solar/geomagnetic cycles
Subjects:Geoscience: Meteorological and Climatology: Weather Forecasting
ID Code:727
Deposited On:18 October 2006