New Article: Explaining observed daily variations and decadal trends in the diurnal air temperature range

How much warmer is the day compared to the night? Or, in other words, how large is the diurnal air temperature range (DTR)? This might seem like a simple question, but the DTR actually varies in surprisingly complex ways across regions and periods. What shapes these variations? What happens to DTR on cloudy days and under clear skies? How does it respond to how wet or dry the land is? And what happens to DTR as the planet warms? We answer these questions in our new study led by Sarosh, published in Geophysical Research Letters. Our goal was to understand the physics behind the DTR using an approach that links the short and long-term variations in DTR to things we can observe and measure, like clouds, sunlight, and surface dryness.

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New article: Entropy explains why combustion is so inefficient, why electricity is so much better, and how the energy transition is dramatically increasing efficiency

The new article (original in German) explains the energy transition from a simple but fundamental physical perspective. And something very basic sooner or later leads us to entropy. It helps us understand why electricity-based technologies are much more efficient than those that use combustion and heat as an intermediate step. And why the energy transition is therefore much more of a technical revolution, namely away from heat and towards electricity, with significantly higher efficiency. 

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#EGU25: We will be in Vienna to share our latest insights on energetic constraints shaping maximum temperatures, temperature variations with altitude, and potential evaporation estimates.

April is here, and geoscientists are once again heading to Vienna. Why? Because Europe’s largest Geoscience Union, EGU, is all set to convene for its General Assembly, EGU25, which take place from 27 April – 2 May 2025. We are thrilled to be there again and share our science. Our group will be contributing to three oral presentations by our PhD student Saurabh and postdocs Tejasvi and Sarosh.

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Touring India 2025: A short course in Roorkee, and visits with talks in Gandhinagar, Bombay, and Pune to discuss and interact on entropy and the powers of the Earth system


We were back in India, spending a week at the IIT Roorkee to teach a short course on the Second Law in the Earth System Science, giving talks and having discussions at IIT Gandhinagar, IIT Bombay, IISER Pune and IITM. Find out more on what we did and discussed, look at a few photos, and some related papers in this blogpost.

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New Paper: Clouds obscure the link between extreme rainfall and rising temperatures

Rainfall events are expected to intensify everywhere because warmer air can hold more moisture. However, testing this relationship with observations across warmer regions and periods sometimes seem to contradict this expectation, showing negative or inconsistent trends. Our new study published in Nature Communications and led by Sarosh shows that it is mainly the cooling effect of clouds associated with rainfall that causes these discrepancies. By accounting for this effect, we resolve the apparent mismatch between observations and theory, providing evidence of increases in extreme rainfall with warmer temperatures. More information in this blogpost and in the paper.

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Notes from vacation: Thoughts on why climate change impacts in the Alps and Italy are already much more severe than what a 1.5 degree target suggests

We just finished our summer vacation, but that‘s no break from feeling the impacts of global warming.  This year we crossed the Austrian Alps and the Appenin mountains in central Italy with our bikes – but where were the ice-covered peaks and why was Italy so hot?  Some thoughts on the basic physics involved and why climate change may already be more severe than what some models anticipate.

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#EGU24: We will be in Vienna to share our updates on thermodynamics, hydrologic sensitivities, biodiversity-climate interactions, temperature extremes and wind energy impacts.

It’s April again, the month when Europe’s largest geoscience union, EGU, convenes for its General Assembly in Vienna, Austria. This year, EGU-24 is scheduled to take place from 14 – 19 April 2024, and we are thrilled to be there and share our science. Our group will be contributing to several presentations, including those by Tejasvi, Sarosh, Axel, Pinhsin and Yinglin.

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#AGU23: Assessing the Impact of Plant Diversity on Terrestrial Climate: Join us at AGU’s fall meeting to explore our poster!

#AGU23 is around the corner!Pinhsin will be there and present her poster on “Plant trait diversity stabilizes climate in a wet and cool state via maximizing terrestrial water recycling” on Thursday, December 14th, 8:30 AM – 12:50 PM PST, in the session “GC41M: The Global Water Cycle: Coupling and Exchanges Between the Ocean, Land, Cryosphere, and Atmosphere I Poster” at MC, Poster Hall A-C – South

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