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Abstract(s)
Global warming is a major concern nowadays. Weather conditions are changing, and it seems
that human activity is one of the main causes. In fact, since the beginning of the industrial
revolution, the burning of fossil fuels has increased the nonnatural emissions of carbon dioxide to
the atmosphere. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas that absorbs the infrared radiation produced
by the reflection of the sunlight on the Earth’s surface, trapping the heat in the atmosphere. Global
warming and the associated climate changes are being the subject of intensive research due to
their major impact on social, economic, and health aspects of human life. This paper studies the
global warming trend in the perspective of dynamical systems and fractional calculus, which is a
new standpoint in this context. Worldwide distributed meteorological stations and temperature
records for the last 100 years are analysed. It is shown that the application of Fourier transforms
and power law trend lines leads to an assertive representation of the global warming dynamics
and a simpler analysis of its characteristics.
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Hindawi Publishing Corporation
