Bet on February UAH

Better late than never: You can now bet on February UAH!

[sockulator(../musings/wp-content/plugins/BettingScripts/UAHBets5.php?Metric=UAH TTL?Units=C?cutOffMonth=2?cutOffDay=21?cutOffYear=2013?DateMetric=February, 2013?)sockulator]
Bets close at midnight, Feb 20, 2013.

28 thoughts on “Bet on February UAH”

  1. What I really wonder about is the cause of the spike up in January. Has anyone seen a good explanation for that?

  2. Most of the increase in ch5 was between Jan. 1 and 5th, after that it stayed fairly flat. Ch6 and 7 also seemed to change at the same time, possibly a day or two earlier.
    I am awaiting daily UAH figures to see how much they match.
    I wasn’t watching ch5 in January but if I had been, I might have got closer in my bet.

  3. I wouldn’t say inexplicable. More like “chaotic”. Roy Spencer describes one source on his website.

    These temperature swings are mostly the result of variations in rainfall activity. Precipitation systems, which are constantly occurring around the world, release the latent heat of condensation of water vapor which was absorbed during the process of evaporation from the Earth’s surface.

    While this process is continuously occurring, there are periods when such activity is somewhat more intense or widespread. These events, called Intra-Seasonal Oscillations (ISOs) are most evident over the tropical Pacific Ocean.

    During the convectively active phase of the ISO, there are increased surface winds of up to 1 to 2 knots averaged over the tropical oceans, which causes faster surface evaporation, more water vapor in the troposphere, and more convective rainfall activity. This above-average release of latent heat exceeds the rate at which the atmosphere emits infrared radiation to space, and so the resulting energy imbalance causes a temperature increase (see the above plot).

    During the convectively inactive phase, the opposite happens: a decrease in surface wind, evaporation, rainfall, and temperature, as the atmosphere radiatively cools more rapidly than latent heating can replenish the energy.

    (Lots more detail on his website of course.)

  4. If you look at all the AMSU channels except the surface one, there is an altitude where the annual temp change is almost flat. Below that, the channels track each other – if one year is relatively higher at lower altitudes, the other lower altitude channels track it. But above the “flat line,” the stratosphere moves opposite the lower channels. All-in-all and generally speaking, they are all in synch, both in rate and magnitude, but not necessarily the sign of the rate changes.

  5. A little perspective from the Daily UAH temperatures (actual) covering 2010 to 2013.

    There was a pretty steep downspike in temps for 3 weeks in December (especially for the Land stations and especially in the NH versus the lower troposphere here) and then there is a large spike upwards in UAH temps which really starts towards the end of December, peaks on January 8, 2013 and is mainly in the SH.

    Looking at the OLR maps, this is from extreme ENSO-like cloudiness on the southern side of the ENSO regions in the Pacific – a very large area where the clouds actually held the heat in.

    Daily UAH charted 2010-2013.

    http://s8.postimage.org/o5gabaet1/Daily_UAH_Jan2013.png

    http://cawcr.gov.au/staff/mwheeler/maproom/OLR/map.lastmonth.gif

    Quite a bit of similarity to the ENSO, AMO and Global SST numbers over the same period (keep in mind the 3 month lag from the ENSO and note my comment about the ENSO-like cloudiness on the southern side of ENSO regions in the last few months – this is how the ENSO impacts global temperatures – this area has now turned very cold since it has got no Sun for 2 months now and the clouds are now gone. Transitioning to La Nina atmospheric conditions now.

    http://s11.postimage.org/456i0jlqb/Weekly_ENSO_AMO_Glob_SSTs_Feb62013.png

    http://www.ospo.noaa.gov/data/sst/anomaly/2013/anomnight.2.14.2013.gif

    Temps should be trending down now for at least 6 months.

  6. It has been pointed out many times that the obsession with the atmosphere is misplaced. Like pre-Galelaens, we tend to see the atmosphere as the center of the climate universe because we live in it. But really, it is just the tail of the thermal mass dog. The oceans are where the action is.

  7. Bill Illis,

    Thanks,
    Unfortunately the latest file seems to be in unix manual format, which I can’t open.
    The plain text file only seems to be updated to the end of November.
    I normally use the link via the discover website:
    ftp://ghrc.nsstc.nasa.gov/pub/data/msu/t2lt/
    In that case the text file has been updated to end of December, but not January yet.
    Why would the .man file be updated to the end of January but not the text file?

  8. Ray (Comment #110204),

    Unfortunately the latest file seems to be in unix manual format, which I can’t open.

    What are you using to open it?

  9. Regarding the tltday_5.5.man file, when the file started getting posted in this format (it used to just be a .txt file),

    … I think I just saved it to disk and then set Excel as the program to open .man files. It comes out as a typical text file and then “text to columns” …

  10. Skeptikal,
    “What are you using to open it?”

    Nothing – that’s the problem!

    HaroldW,
    Thanks for the tip, that’s useful.

    Bill Illis,
    Thanks, I just gave up when windows said it couldn’t open the file.

  11. Strange, I don’t recall making that second bet, identical to the first.
    John M,
    NCDC not up as much as UAH/RSS globally and an actual fall in the SH. A divergence between satellite/terrestial anomalies in prospect?
    I think that GISTemp was published by the 15th last month.

  12. My analysis of this month’s betting.
    NO. OF BETS 46
    MAX 0.424
    MIN 0.010
    MEAN 0.291
    MEDIAN 0.305
    STD DEV 0.097
    MEAN 1-23 0.316
    MEAN 24-46 0.266
    MEAN PLUS 1 SD 0.388
    MEAN MINUS 1 SD 0.193
    WITHIN +/- 1 SD (%) 67.39
    ABOVE MEAN (%) 54.35
    BELOW MEAN (%) 45.65
    Since this is only a statistical analysis, and has no bearing on the actual result, I have taken it upon myself to assume that the bet by JCH of 17c, was intended to be 0.17c for the purposes of the analysis.
    The mean and median figures are quite close this month, with a slight majority of those above the mean.

  13. Hmm, I wonder how my original bet triplicated …?

    No matter, this is my latest story and I’m sticking with it. This is also, by actual count, the umpteen dozenth version of my multi-variable statistical model. For those keeping score at home, we now have eight variables, S.E. of regression=.103, AIC=-687.3

  14. The January GISTemp figure seems to have been published overnight, which seems a strange time to update the files, i.e. Sunday night.
    Like NCDC, the global and NH figures are up, with a decline in the SH.

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