Patrick T. Brown, PhD
Curriculum vitae
CURRENT POSITION
Carnegie Institution for Science, Stanford University
Postdoctoral Research Scientist (under Ken Caldeira)
EDUCATION
Duke University, Durham, North Carolina
Doctor of Philosophy, Earth and Ocean Science, 2016
San Jose State University, San Jose, California
Master of Science, Meteorology and Climate Science, 2012
University of Wisconsin – Madison, Madison, Wisconsin
Bachelor of Science, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, 2008
Tweets by @PatrickTBrown31
Patrick T. Brown, PhD Retweeted
Max Roser
✔
@MaxCRoser
Recently @BillGates asked me which statistics we should all know if we want to understand how the world is changing.
Just now he published my answer on his personal website:https://www.gatesnotes.com/Development/Max-Roser-three-facts-everyone-should-know …
Greater future global warming (still) inferred from Earth’s recent energy budget
Posted on December 21, 2017 by ptbrown31
SNIPPET:
We recently
published a paper in Nature in which we leveraged observations of the Earth’s radiative energy budget to statistically constrain 21st-century climate model projections of global warming. We found that observations of the Earth’s energy budget allow us to infer generally greater central estimates of future global warming and smaller spreads about those central estimates than the raw model simulations indicate. More background on the paper can be obtained from our blog post on the research.
Last week, Nic Lewis published a critique of our work on several blogs titled A closer look shows global warming will not be greater than we thought. We welcome scientifically-grounded critiques of our work since this is the fundamental way in which science advances. In this spirit, we would like to thank Nic Lewis for his appraisal. However, we find Lewis’ central criticisms to be lacking merit. As we elaborate on below, his arguments do not undermine the findings of the study.
Full lengthy article:https://patricktbrown.org/2017/12/21/greater-future-global-warming-still-inferred-from-earths-recent-energy-budget/