An Ideal yet Highly Accurate Model Correlating Global Average Temperature to Excess CO2-Emissions

14 June 2021, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The causality of preceding atmospheric excess-to-equilibrium CO2-amounts and trailing system temperature increase is captured in terms of the ideal gas law, equilibrium thermodynamics and transition state theory for the first time: the model’s performance is excellent, publicly available global mean temperature data from 1880 (13.58 °C / 290.7 ppm) to April 2021 (14.49 °C / 416.2 ppm) are reproduced at less than ±2 % deviation. Eight future global mean temperatures for atmospheric CO2-levels between 450 ppm and 7000 ppm are extrapolated and an empiric expression of the relation is derived. The model’s ideal nature allows adaption for other greenhouse gases and provides a reference for conclusions about the energetic weighting and the wider significance of the CO2-based proportion in the total Greenhouse effect.

Keywords

Climate Change Evidence
Climate Change Conditions
Anthropogenic Climate Change
anthropogenic CO 2 emissions
carbon dioxide levels
carbon Dioxide Absorption
carbon dioxide (CO2)
Equilibrium thermodynamics
Transition State Theory
Transition state theory calculations
ideal gas model
Ideal gas law
greenhouse gas emission scenarios
Greenhouse effect
greenhouse effect gases
trace gases concentrations

Supplementary materials

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V1 ClimateModel ESI baseline1700 data references
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V1 ClimateModel ESI to table2
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