Journal Article
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 119, iss. 6, 2022
Authors
Fengfei Song, Guang J. Zhang, V. Ramanathan, L. Ruby Leung
Abstract
Significance
The Earth has warmed by 1.2
±
0.1 °C since the preindustrial era. The most common metric to measure the ongoing global warming is surface air temperature since it has long and reliable observational records. However, surface air temperature alone does not fully describe the nature of global warming and its impact on climate and weather extremes. Here we show that surface equivalent potential temperature, which combines the surface air temperature and humidity, is a more comprehensive metric not only for the global warming but also for its impact on climate and weather extremes including tropical deep convection and extreme heat waves. We recommend that it should be used more widely in future climate change studies.