Geography, asked by SohamRaj007, 11 months ago

What did England and his

colleagues observe after

simulating the climate change

data?(Short Answer)​

Answers

Answered by jefin18
1

Answer:

The use of computer models runs right through the heart of climate science.

The use of computer models runs right through the heart of climate science.From helping scientists unravel cycles of ice ages hundreds of thousands of years ago to making projections for this century or the next, models are an essential tool for understanding the Earth’s climate.

The use of computer models runs right through the heart of climate science.From helping scientists unravel cycles of ice ages hundreds of thousands of years ago to making projections for this century or the next, models are an essential tool for understanding the Earth’s climate.But what is a climate model? What does it look like? What does it actually do? These are all questions that anyone outside the world of climate science might reasonably ask.

The use of computer models runs right through the heart of climate science.From helping scientists unravel cycles of ice ages hundreds of thousands of years ago to making projections for this century or the next, models are an essential tool for understanding the Earth’s climate.But what is a climate model? What does it look like? What does it actually do? These are all questions that anyone outside the world of climate science might reasonably ask.Carbon Brief has spoken to a range of climate scientists in order to answer these questions and more. What follows is an in-depth Q&A on climate models and how scientists use them. You can use the links below to navigate to a specific question.

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