In the midst of global climate change, a scientifically intriguing paradox has emerged: while temperatures at Earth’s surface and in the lower atmosphere continue to climb, the upper atmosphere—the stratosphere—has been cooling significantly. This seemingly contradictory phenomenon has puzzled climatologists for decades, serving as a hallmark of anthropogenic climate impacts but with an elusive mechanistic explanation. Now, a cutting-edge study from Columbia University has shed light on the physical processes responsible, revealing how carbon dioxide (CO2) interacts with infrared radiation to produce this upper atmospheric chill.
The stratosphere extends from roughly 11 to 50 kilometers above Earth’s surface and plays a critical role in Earth’s radiative energy balance. At lower atmospheric levels, CO2 acts as a greenhouse gas, trapping heat by absorbing infrared radiation emitted from the Earth’s surface and reradiating it back. However, in the stratosphere, the dynamic reverses—CO2 molecules behave as radiative coolers, releasing energy into space and thus lowering temperatures aloft. This dual role of CO2 underscores the complexity of atmospheric physics and climate feedback mechanisms, previously only qualitatively understood.
Pioneering climate modeler Syukuro Manabe predicted this cooling phenomenon in the 1960s through foundational climate modeling, a contribution that helped earn his Nobel Prize. Since then, observations reveal that the stratosphere has cooled by approximately 2 degrees Celsius since the mid-1980s, a trend many times greater than what would occur in the absence of rising anthropogenic CO2. Despite this, the detailed physical interactions between CO2 and the spectrum of infrared wavelengths responsible for this cooling remained inadequately quantified until now.
Led by postdoctoral scientist Sean Cohen alongside Robert Pincus and Lorenzo Polvani at Columbia, the research team embarked on a rigorous theoretical journey. They developed a quantitative model of stratospheric cooling by iteratively integrating pen-and-paper analytical calculations with comprehensive numerical climate simulations and observational data. This approach allowed them to assign precise mathematical representations to the photophysical processes governing CO2’s radiative behavior, refining these equations repeatedly to achieve the best fit with real-world phenomena.
Central to their breakthrough is the recognition that not all infrared wavelengths contribute equally to radiative cooling. CO2 molecules absorb and emit infrared radiation in specific spectral bands, and among these, certain wavelengths occupy a “Goldilocks zone” where the cooling efficiency is optimal. As atmospheric CO2 concentrations rise, this spectral window expands, enabling stronger radiative heat loss at stratospheric altitudes. Their theory quantitatively elucidates how increasing CO2 augments the stratosphere’s capacity to shed heat.
While other atmospheric constituents such as ozone and water vapor participate in radiative processes, the study finds their roles relatively minor compared to CO2’s dominant influence. Both ozone and water vapor contribute to heating of the troposphere and cooling of the stratosphere by emitting infrared radiation, but their effects are insufficient to explain the magnitude of observed stratospheric temperature decline, reinforcing the centrality of CO2 in this dynamic.
Their model successfully reproduces several well-documented phenomena: the vertical gradient of stratospheric cooling with altitude—least pronounced near the lower stratosphere and most intense near the stratopause at about 50 kilometers; the finding that each doubling of CO2 leads to roughly an 8-degree Celsius cooling at the stratopause; and the paradoxical outcome that a colder stratosphere reduces the Earth system’s net infrared emission to space, ultimately enhancing warming below. This last aspect elucidates an intricate climate feedback loop where increased CO2 radiatively cools the upper atmosphere but strengthens the greenhouse effect in the lower atmosphere.
The implications of this work extend beyond confirming known qualitative results; they fundamentally improve mechanistic understanding of a pillar climate process critical to Earth’s energy dynamics. By isolating the fundamental photophysical interactions driving stratospheric cooling, the researchers provide a robust quantitative framework to inform climate models, improving predictions of future atmospheric response to escalating greenhouse gas emissions.
Furthermore, the insights gained may influence planetary science. Understanding how CO2-driven radiative cooling occurs in Earth’s stratosphere opens avenues to explore analogous phenomena on other planets with CO2-rich atmospheres, such as Mars or Venus, as well as exoplanets. Decoding these extraterrestrial atmospheres’ thermodynamics could aid in interpreting observations and assessing planetary habitability.
Ultimately, this research underscores the multifaceted and sometimes counterintuitive effects of carbon dioxide on Earth’s climate system. It enriches our grasp of the vertical thermal structure of the atmosphere and highlights the indispensable role of precise physical modeling for climate science progress. As the world grapples with escalating climate risks, such fundamental breakthroughs will enhance our ability to anticipate and mitigate the broad consequences wrought by greenhouse gas emissions.
Subject of Research: Not applicable
Article Title: A New Study Explains How Carbon Dioxide Cools the Upper Atmosphere—and Warms Earth Below
News Publication Date: 11-May-2026
Web References:
DOI: 10.1038/s41561-026-01965-8
Image Credits: NASA
Keywords: carbon dioxide, stratospheric cooling, climate change, infrared radiation, greenhouse effect, atmospheric physics, Earth’s energy balance, climate modeling, radiative transfer, anthropogenic emissions

