Contour lengthening rates near the tropopause
Geophysical Research Letters American Geophysical Union (AGU) 24:22 (1997) 2721-2724
Warming early Mars with carbon dioxide clouds that scatter infrared radiation.
Science (New York, N.Y.) 278:5341 (1997) 1273-1276
Abstract:
Geomorphic evidence that Mars was warm enough to support flowing water about 3.8 billion years ago presents a continuing enigma that cannot be explained by conventional greenhouse warming mechanisms. Model calculations show that the surface of early Mars could have been warmed through a scattering variant of the greenhouse effect, resulting from the ability of the carbon dioxide ice clouds to reflect the outgoing thermal radiation back to the surface. This process could also explain how Earth avoided an early irreversible glaciation and could extend the size of the habitable zone on extrasolar planets around stars.Modeling quasi‐biennial variability in the semiannual double peak
Journal of Geophysical Research American Geophysical Union (AGU) 102:D13 (1997) 16169-16187
Seasonal, semiannual, and interannual variability seen in measurements of methane made by the UARS Halogen Occultation Experiment
Journal of Geophysical Research American Geophysical Union (AGU) 102:D13 (1997) 16189-16199
Modelling of stratospheric intrusions within a mid-latitude synoptic-scale disturbance
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley 123:541 (1997) 1377-1403