| 1. Domain | 1.1 Scope of the Domain | Boundaries | The range of phenomena the science includes and excludes. | Climatology studies long-term atmospheric patterns, variability, and statistics; Climate Dynamics examines the physical mechanisms driving climate variability and change across the atmosphere, ocean, land, and cryosphere. Excludes weather-scale prediction except as it contributes to climate statistics or feedbacks. |
| | Scale | The spatial, temporal, or organizational level at which the science operates (e.g., quantum, cellular, social, cosmic). | Operates on global to regional scales (10–40,000 km) and on monthly to multi-millennial timescales, analyzing cycles (ENSO, AMO, PDO), radiative balance shifts, paleoclimate regimes, and long-term feedback systems. |
| 1.2 Ontological Commitments | Entities | The kinds of things assumed to exist within the domain (particles, organisms, agents, fields, etc.). | Atmosphere, oceans, sea ice, land surface, biosphere, radiation fields, greenhouse gases, aerosols, climate modes, feedback loops, and slow components such as deep-ocean circulations and cryospheric reservoirs. |
| | Properties | The fundamental attributes these entities possess (mass, charge, genotype, preference, etc.). | Global temperature, radiative forcing, ocean heat content, albedo, greenhouse-gas concentrations, climate sensitivity, heat transport, humidity distributions, circulation indices, and multi-scale variability metrics. |
| | Categories | The basic ontological types used to classify domain elements (substances, processes, relations, structures). | Climate regimes (tropical, extratropical, polar), internal variability modes (ENSO, MJO, NAO), forcing types (natural vs anthropogenic), feedback categories (albedo, water vapor, lapse rate, cloud), and slow vs fast climate responses. |
| 1.3 State-Variables | Variables | The measurable or definable properties that describe system conditions. | Temperature, precipitation, radiation fluxes, cloud cover, sea-surface temperatures, ocean salinity, sea ice extent, greenhouse-gas concentrations, wind fields, and energy imbalances. |
| | Parameterization | How variables encode and represent the system’s state. | Represents unresolved sub-grid processes such as convection, cloud microphysics, vegetation responses, sea-ice thermodynamics, and turbulent mixing through empirical or physically based parameter schemes. |
| 1.4 Admissible Idealizations | Simplifications | Conceptual reductions used to make the domain tractable (point masses, rational agents, perfect gases). | Steady-state energy balance assumptions, mixed-layer ocean approximations, simplified feedback formulations, reduced-complexity climate models, linearized radiative forcing responses, and idealized ocean basins. |
| | Validity Conditions | The limits and contexts in which idealizations hold or break down. | Valid for large-scale, long-term averages where internal variability smooths short-term noise; breaks down in extreme events, abrupt climate shifts, nonlinear feedback cascades, and poorly constrained paleo intervals. |
| 1.5 Domain Assumptions | Structural Assumptions | Background ontological stances such as determinism, continuity, randomness, discreteness. | Climate obeys conservation of mass, energy, and momentum; feedbacks operate within thermodynamic limits; large-scale modes arise from coupled ocean–atmosphere dynamics; forcing–response relationships are physically grounded. |
| | Implicit Commitments | Unstated but necessary assumptions that shape the field’s conceptual structure. | Assumes climate statistics are meaningful over long periods, internal variability is representable, parameterizations capture essential sub-grid processes, and equilibrium or quasi-equilibrium frameworks apply in many contexts. |
| 1.6 Internal Coherence Requirements | Consistency | The demand that domain concepts do not contradict one another. | Radiative, dynamical, chemical, and feedback components must not contradict conservation laws or each other across temporal or spatial scales; climate modes must integrate coherently with forcing and feedback theories. |
| | Compatibility | The requirement that entities, variables, and assumptions fit together into a unified descriptive framework. | State variables, feedbacks, radiative processes, and ocean–atmosphere coupling must form a unified explanation for observed climate variability and long-term change, consistent with physical and statistical constraints. |
| 2. Evidence Layer | 2.1 Observable Phenomena | Observables | The aspects of the domain that can produce detectable signals accessible to measurement. | Long-term temperature trends, precipitation patterns, sea-level rise, ocean heat content, radiative fluxes, greenhouse-gas concentrations, sea-ice extent, circulation indices (ENSO, NAO), paleoclimate proxies, and large-scale variability modes. |
| | Detection Limits | The boundaries of what can be resolved or sensed by current instruments or methods. | Constrained by sparse historical data, limited paleo-resolution, satellite calibration uncertainties, bias in early instrumental records, gaps in deep-ocean observations, and difficulty detecting subtle long-term signals amid short-term noise. |
| 2.2 Measurement Systems | Units | Standardized quantifications (meters, seconds, volts, decibels, dollars, etc.) necessary for consistent comparison. | Kelvin/°C, millimeters (precipitation), watts per square meter (radiation), ppm/ppb (GHGs), meters (sea level), Joules (ocean heat content), and isotopic ratios (paleoclimate proxies). |
| | Instruments | Devices and tools (microscopes, spectrometers, sensors, surveys, detectors) used to produce measurements. | Satellites (radiometers, spectrometers), ARGO floats, tide gauges, ice-core drilling systems, paleoclimate proxy extraction tools, surface meteorological stations, eddy-covariance towers, and oceanographic profilers. |
| 2.3 Operational Definitions | Definitions | Terms defined by specific measurement procedures, ensuring empirical clarity. | Climate normals (30-year averages), radiative forcing, climate anomalies, oscillation indices (ENSO, PDO), aerosol optical depth, and standard definitions for climate variability and feedback diagnostics. |
| | Procedures | The explicit steps required to perform a measurement in a reproducible way. | Procedures for homogenizing long-term records, calculating anomalies, reconstructing paleoclimate signals, calibrating proxy data, bias-correcting satellite time series, and synthesizing multi-source datasets. |
| 2.4 Data Acquisition | Protocols | Formal processes for gathering data under controlled or standardized conditions. | Standardized global observing systems (GCOS), satellite orbital cycles, long-term surface station networks, ARGO deployment schedules, periodic ice-core drilling, and paleoclimate field-collection campaigns. |
| | Sampling | Rules determining which subset of the domain is measured and how representative it is. | Uneven spatial distribution—dense in developed regions, sparse in oceans/poles; paleo sampling constrained by archive availability; climate sampling requires long-duration, consistent observations across decades to centuries. |
| 2.5 Data Character & Format | Data Types | The form raw evidence takes (time series, spectra, images, counts, qualitative records). | Time series, gridded reanalysis fields, climate model outputs, satellite imagery, ocean profiles, proxy-series data, radiative flux records, and multi-decadal composite datasets. |
| | Resolution | The granularity or precision with which data is captured. | Ranges from meter-scale proxy sampling to ~1 km satellite resolution to ~50-250 km climate-model grids; temporal resolution varies from daily to decadal/millennial depending on dataset type. |
| 2.6 Reliability & Calibration | Calibration | Adjustment procedures ensuring instruments produce accurate results. | Requires inter-satellite calibration, homogenization of long-term station records, drift correction in ocean sensors, proxy calibration using modern analogs, and radiative-transfer-based validation of satellite products. |
| | Error Characterization | Identification and quantification of noise, uncertainty, bias, and measurement error. | Quantifies uncertainties from sampling gaps, model biases, proxy interpretation errors, instrument drift, retrieval uncertainties, and noise introduced by internal climate variability. |
| 3. Structural Layer | 3.1 Patterns & Regularities | Laws / Relations | Stable, repeatable patterns governing how observables behave across conditions. | Governed by radiative balance laws, energy conservation, geostrophic adjustment, thermodynamic feedbacks (water vapor, albedo, lapse rate), ocean–atmosphere coupling, and statistical laws of climate variability. |
| | Invariants | Quantities or properties that remain constant under transformations (symmetries, conservation laws). | Invariants include conservation of energy in the climate system, approximate conservation of angular momentum, long-term stability of climate modes, and persistent spectral peaks in internal variability (ENSO, MJO, NAO). |
| 3.2 Causal Architecture | Mechanisms | Underlying processes or structures that produce the observed regularities. | Mechanisms include radiative forcing, ocean heat uptake, thermohaline circulation, ice–albedo feedback, cloud–radiation interactions, biosphere–climate coupling, internal modes of variability, and volcanic/solar forcing. |
| | Pathways | Organized sequences of interactions forming a causal chain or network. | Examples include: greenhouse-gas increase → radiative imbalance → warming → water-vapor feedback → circulation shifts; or ENSO warm-phase initiation → atmospheric teleconnections → global hydroclimate impacts. |
| 3.3 Theoretical Vocabulary | Concepts | Core terms that encode the domain’s structure (force, gene, equilibrium, field). | Key concepts include radiative forcing, climate sensitivity, feedback factors, internal variability, teleconnections, boundary conditions, ocean mixing, equilibrium vs. transient response, and coupled climate modes. |
| | Classifications | Taxonomies, categories, or typologies that organize entities and relations. | Climate regimes (glacial/interglacial, monsoon systems), oscillations (ENSO, PDO, AMO, NAO), forcing types (anthropogenic vs natural), feedbacks (positive/negative), and response timescales (fast/slow components). |
| 3.4 Formal Representations | Equations | Mathematical constructs expressing laws, relations, or mechanisms. | Uses energy-balance equations, radiative-transfer equations, coupled Navier–Stokes for ocean–atmosphere, tracer-transport equations, feedback-formalism equations, and statistical/dynamical formulations of climate modes. |
| | Models | Structured representations—mathematical, computational, or conceptual—used to predict and explain phenomena. | Includes Earth system models (ESMs), general circulation models (GCMs), intermediate complexity climate models, energy balance models (EBMs), paleoclimate models, and statistical climate–mode simulation frameworks. |
| 3.5 Idealized Structures | Simplified Models | Purposeful abstractions that capture essential dynamics while omitting irrelevant detail. | Idealized structures include slab-ocean models, 1D radiative–convective equilibrium models, reduced-form feedback models, simplified ENSO oscillators, and linear response models for radiative forcing. |
| | Limit Conditions | Regimes where specific models or approximations hold (classical vs. quantum, linear vs. nonlinear). | Simplifications break down in abrupt-climate-change scenarios, nonlinear ice-sheet dynamics, deep-ocean overturning changes, rapid volcanic forcing, and highly uncertain paleo intervals. |
| 3.6 Integrative Frameworks | Unifying Theories | Higher-order structures that connect disparate laws or mechanisms under a coherent whole. | Unifies radiation, thermodynamics, fluid dynamics, chemistry, and land–ocean–ice interactions into coupled climate theory; includes energy balance theories, feedback analysis, and multi-scale internal variability frameworks. |
| | Interdisciplinary Links | Points where the theory connects to adjacent sciences or larger explanatory systems. | Connects with oceanography, atmospheric dynamics, glaciology, geophysics, biogeochemistry, ecology, paleoclimatology, and environmental science through coupled Earth-system processes. |
| 4. Method Layer | 4.1 Inquiry Design | Experimental Design | Structured plans for manipulating variables to test causal claims. | Uses controlled climate model experiments (forcing perturbations, sensitivity tests, idealized feedback studies), paleoclimate analogs, and radiative–convective experiments to isolate causal mechanisms driving climate variability and long-term change. |
| | Observational Design | Systematic approaches for gathering non-manipulated data (surveys, field studies, natural experiments). | Employs structured global observation systems—satellite missions, ARGO networks, long-term station archives, paleoclimate sampling—to capture natural climate variability without manipulating the system. |
| 4.2 Testing & Validation | Hypothesis Testing | Procedures for evaluating whether evidence supports or contradicts specific claims. | Tests hypotheses about feedback strength, climate sensitivity, ENSO mechanisms, circulation shifts, anthropogenic attribution, and ocean–atmosphere coupling by comparing model responses with observed trends and variability modes. |
| | Replication | The requirement that results be independently reproducible under similar conditions. | Requires consistent results across multiple climate models, reanalysis datasets, independent paleoclimate reconstructions, satellite records, and long-duration ground networks. |
| 4.3 Inference & Evaluation | Statistical Inference | Rules for drawing conclusions from noisy or incomplete data. | Uses trend analysis, detection-and-attribution methods, spectral analysis, regression, EOFs, Bayesian inference, and ensemble statistics to extract climate signals from noisy, multidecadal datasets. |
| | Model Comparison | Criteria (fit, simplicity, predictive accuracy, robustness) used to evaluate competing models. | Compares models based on bias patterns, variability reproduction, feedback behavior, transient and equilibrium climate responses, cloud and radiation fidelity, and long-term hindcast performance. |
| 4.4 Error Management | Error Analysis | Identification and quantification of random and systematic errors. | Identifies uncertainties from sparse observations, proxy interpretation errors, model-structure uncertainty, internal variability noise, radiative forcing uncertainties, and parameterization limitations. |
| | Bias Control | Methods for minimizing subjective, instrumental, or procedural biases. | Uses homogenization of long-term data, cross-platform calibration, multi-model ensembles, reanalysis assimilation, paleoclimate calibration strategies, and bias-correction techniques in climate simulations. |
| 4.5 Adjudication & Revision | Peer Scrutiny | Collective evaluation of claims through critique, review, and debate. | Involves climate model intercomparison projects (CMIP), paleoclimate synthesis efforts, radiative-forcing evaluations, and systematic community review of feedback formulations and model outputs. |
| | Theory Revision | Procedures for modifying, replacing, or discarding models based on new evidence. | Revises feedback strengths, radiative-forcing estimates, ENSO models, climate sensitivity ranges, and long-term circulation frameworks as new observational, paleoclimate, or modeling evidence emerges. |
| 4.6 Integrity Conditions | Transparency | Requirements to disclose methods, data, assumptions, and limitations. | Requires disclosure of model code, forcing datasets, proxy reconstruction methodology, parameterization schemes, climate-observing calibration methods, and complete uncertainty documentation. |
| | Ethical Standards | Norms ensuring responsible conduct in experimentation, data handling, and publication. | Ensures responsible communication of climate risks, accurate reporting of uncertainty, transparent data stewardship, reproducibility of methods, and adherence to scientific integrity in climate assessments. |