http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/05/150514095741.htm

Climate scientists find warming in higher atmosphere: Elusive tropospheric hot 
spot located
Date: May 14, 2015Source: University of New South WalesSummary: Updated data 
and better analysis methods have found clear indications of warming in the 
upper troposphere and a 10 percent increase in winds over the Southern Ocean. 
The inability to detect this hotspot previously has been used by those who 
doubt human-made global warming to suggest climate change is not occurring as a 
result of increasing carbon dioxide emissions.
Researchers have published results in Environmental Research Letters confirming 
strong warming in the upper troposphere, known colloquially as the tropospheric 
hotspot. The hot[spot] has been long expected as part of global warming theory 
and appears in many global climate models.
The inability to detect this hotspot previously has been used by those who 
doubt human-made global warming to suggest climate change is not occurring as a 
result of increasing carbon dioxide emissions.
"Using more recent data and better analysis methods we have been able to 
re-examine the global weather balloon network, known as radiosondes, and have 
found clear indications of warming in the upper troposphere," said lead author 
ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science Chief Investigator Prof 
Steve Sherwood.
"We were able to do this by producing a publicly available temperature and wind 
data set of the upper troposphere extending from 1958-2012, so it is there for 
anyone to see."
The new dataset was the result of extending an existing data record and then 
removing artefacts caused by station moves and instrument changes. This 
revealed real changes in temperature as opposed to the artificial changes 
generated by alterations to the way the data was collected.
No climate models were used in the process that revealed the tropospheric 
hotspot. The researchers instead used observations and combined two well-known 
techniques -- linear regression and Kriging.
"We deduced from the data what natural weather and climate variations look 
like, then found anomalies in the data that looked more like sudden one-off 
shifts from these natural variations and removed them," said Prof Sherwood.
"All of this was done using a well established procedure developed by 
statisticians in 1977."
The results show that even though there has been a slowdown in the warming of 
the global average temperatures on the surface of Earth, the warming has 
continued strongly throughout the troposphere except for a very thin layer at 
around 14-15km above the surface of Earth where it has warmed slightly less.
As well as confirming the tropospheric hotspot, the researchers also found a 
10% increase in winds over the Southern Ocean. The character of this increase 
suggests it may be the result of ozone depletion.
"I am very interested in these wind speed increases and whether they may have 
also played some role in slowing down the warming at the surface of the ocean," 
said Prof Sherwood.
"However, one thing this improved data set shows us is that we should no longer 
accept the claim that there is warming missing higher in the atmosphere. That 
warming is now clearly seen."
Story Source:
The above story is based on materials provided by University of New South Wales.
Journal Reference:
Steven C Sherwood, Nidhi Nishant. Atmospheric changes through 2012 as shown by 
iteratively homogenized radiosonde temperature and wind data 
(IUKv2).Environmental Research Letters, 2015; 10 (5): 054007 DOI: 
10.1088/1748-9326/10/5/054007

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