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Hi BenV, didn't you read the first paragrapg of my comment? I asked " .. why do paleo-climatologists use collision diameter in preference to kinetic diameter when considering the migration of air molecules through firn and ice? .. " and provided some background to help the scientists here to understand what is behind my question.Bets regards, Pete Ridley
Wiybit, you have summarised reasonably well the basic question that Jaworowski et al. raised back in 1992 in their paper “Do glaciers tell a true atmospheric CO2 story?”
but they covered about 20 processes that could distort the composition of residual air extracted from “sealed” pockets within ice cores. My specific question relates to only one, preferential fractionation over decades, centuries or even millennia of CO2 and other gases that have smaller kinetic diameters than do N2, O2, Ar or CH4.
The researchers than I mentioned in my first comment ignore kinetic diameter
and use collision diameter,
which I hypothesise is not appropriate when the diameter of pores within and the channels that link ice air pockets approach the size of those smaller molecules as the ice is reaching the final stages of compression to a state where the air pockets become “closed off”.
BenV(alsler?) I’ve checked up on your background and looked up some of your previous comments. The only comment that I found of interest was your response to a question by one neilep who asked on 31/01/2008 @ 02:05:41 “So, how does a climate model get created ?...do they just use the last few hundred years of weather records and data and average it all out or is it a tad more complicated than that ?...and how accurate are they ?”I found your response less than inspiring. “Basically, you make a weather simulator (if windspeed=x, direction=y, then Z happens - but about a millionfold more complicated) and then plug real data into it. If the outcome of your 'simulator' consistently matches the observed changes in climate over a given timescale, you have a working climate model. If it fails to predict what you already know to have happened, then you need to tweak your model. When your simulator can accurately predict past changes based on past data, you can assume that it may accurately predict future events based on current data.” (http://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=12826.msg352094;boardseen).If that and your background are anything to go by you probably have nothing substantial to offer regarding migration of molecules through porous media, but I could be wrong. Your training and experience in zoology and science communications probably means that you have little more understanding than I have of molecular dynamics. Don’t take that as an insult as it isn’t meant that way. ...One thing that you could probably help me out with is in reference to an experiment presented by the BBC’s Ian Stewart and available on U-tube (//www.youtube.com/watch?v=SeYfl45X1wo It was linked to by climate science “expert” Professor Mike Palin, Otago University during our exchanges on the issue of CO2 fractionation a month or so ago (http://hot-topic.co.nz/the-twilight-zone/). Stewart’s attempt to persuade us through that demonstration that CO2 traps a lot of IR requires further scrutiny. I am always suspicious of anything that the BBC or its minions (like Stewart) say about climate change because of the fact that there is a possible vested interest n supporting the CACC doctrine – pension scheme investments.I puzzled over what that demonstration really tells us. On investigation, Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermographic_camera) advises that the colour picture from an infrared camera is not true but pseudo colour, where the colours represent intensity. So when Steward shows us that candle turning more and more blue what is he really demonstrating. In my humble opinion (I’m not a scientist but a retired Chartered Electrical Engineer) he may simply have verified that the candle gets colder and colder as the CO2 that he is pouring into the tube replaces the O2 upon which the candle depends to keep burning brightly (highest intensity). As most of us would expect, the O2 in the tube is depleted and the candle glows less and less brightly (getting cooler) until it goes out. Stewart’s presentation was cut short to ensure that we didn’t see it go out. Well, that’s my conspiracy theory anyway. As always I’m open to persuasion that I am wrong, so if you can repeat that experiment but this time use N2 instead of CO2 and show that the change in colour is different then I might accept that the experiment was demonstrating IR absorption by CO2 – but I’m a sceptic so I doubt that you’ll be able to because the colour change will be identical.Best regards, Pete Ridley
Too long, didn't read
Wiybit, your comment today at 12:12:30 shows that you pretty well understand my hypothesis. Let me just expand a little on it and clear up a few misunderstandings, but please bear in mind that what I describe is only one of several different process that distort the composition of air “trapped” in ice. According to Professor Hartmut Frank, these processes start from the time that the snow begins collecting air from the atmosphere.
The first point is that collision diameter seems to me to be relevant where the distance travelled by a molecule before a collision with any other molecule can occur is large compared with the size of the molecules involved.
This is from the top of the ice sheet covered in highly porous fresh snow down to a level in the firn well before the eventual “close-off” of the air pockets, under which circumstances the laws of Fickian diffusion apply.
As “close-off” is approached (in the Antarctic after many decades of snow build-up) there will come a time when the space available for molecular movement is of the same order as the diameter of the molecules, where collision diameter is irrelevant and kinetic diameter becomes significant.
At that level only smaller molecules will be able to move through the ice, hence air pockets will be depleted in those smaller gases.
This process is recognised by the paleoclimatologists and their models take it into consideration. What they do not seem to consider is that it is the kinetic not collision diameter that is appropriate at this stage.
For many of the gases that make up the atmosphere there is little difference between collision and kinetic diameter, as seen in the listing below, but for CO2 this is not the case.
Consequently, as the ice is compressed and pressure builds up in the pockets the CO2 molecules (and any smaller ones) escape from the pockets and move down the pressure gradient towards the surface, long after the larger gases like N2, O2, Ar and CH4 are trapped.
Thus when the air extracted from ice cores is analysed it shows a lower concentration of CO2 than that which existed in the original atmospheric air at the time the falling snow brought it down to the ice sheet surface.
Quickly comparing collision* v kinetic** diameter (in Å) for the molecules of atmospheric gases of interest to paleo-climatologists, N2 (3.8 v 3.6), O2 (3.5 v 3.5), Ne (2.8 v 2., CO2 (3.9 v 3.3), CO (3.7 v 3., CH4 (3.8 v 3. Ar (3.5 v 3.4), He (2.6 v 2.6), Kr (3.7 v 3.6), Xe (4.0 v 4.0). * From “Fractionation of gases in polar ice during bubble close-off: New constraints from firn air Ne, Kr and Xe observations” by Jeffrey P. Severinghaus and Mark O. Battle, Table 1.** From “VUV absorbing vapours in n-perfluorocarbons” by E. Albrecht, et al. Table 3.Note the difference for CO2.
Also note the size of He and think of the He-filled party balloon compared with one that you and I might blow up ourselves – which stays up the longest and why?
The researchers like Severinghaus, Huber, Bender, make no mention in their papers of kinetic diameter and have concluded from their research and modelling that there is a “magic” molecular diameter of about 3.6Å above which size-dependent fractionation does not ocurr. Because they only consider collision diameter they do not bother with CO2. I have asked Severinghaus if he has run his model using kinetic diameter but had no response.
Your interpretation “ .. that as ice forms the elements like Co2 collide, and therefore move into the pockets they do, in a certain way .. “ is as I see it incorrect. The air is drawn down to the ice sheet surface within falling snow and diffuses within the firn (along with some atmospheric air from above). As the firn is compressed the air pockets develop around the air already present there.Finally, yes (in my opinion) as far as the original past atmospheric composition is concerned it does “ .. mean that the Co2 levels were highier than they think, as more moved upwards .. ”, but only to higher levels, not necessarily “ .. and escaped ..”, if by that you meant escaped from the ice sheet into the atmosphere.
Wiybit, I'll get back to you on the ponts that you raised.
BenV, thanks for acknowledging that you aren’t competent to give an answer to that very significant but rather scientific “ .. topic in hand .. ”, the validity of attempts to reconstruct past atmospheric CO2 content from air allegedly trapped in ice. Thanks also for trying to give an answer to the other relatively simple question that I slipped in here regarding what is demonstrated by that CO2 experiment carried out by Iain Stewart. The answer you gave to that question, like my air-in-ice one, also gives a fair indication of how competent The Naked Scientists are with regard to the very important scientific debate raging presently around the Catastrophic Anthropogenic Climate Change (CACC) doctrine.
BenV, 15/04/2011 23:21:30 Pete, I think you should be able to put (quote) and (/quote) into your word document, but replace those brackets with square brackets. It won't say who the quote is from or when, but should at least appear...
.. What do Madidus' activities on other fora have to do with the topic in hand?
15/04/2011 16:21:39 .. I think you mean it's a multi-layered process.
… Ice is a solid isn't it, I kinda think it's like as ice forms and compacts the gases are squezzed out, and if as you are suggesting gases can move through smaller, gaps then I suppose more would be squezzed out.
.. but why do they ignore it? They either are ignorant of it or some some reason feel it has no bearing, or plays to insignifcant a role to be accounted for. I assume, but it sounds a bit strage for scientists to just ignore, a kinetic factor for no reason. What is the justifaction for ignoring it?
.. what is it about Co2 that makes it so different? Personally I think much of the man made co2 we have in the atmospere is comming from CO cabon monoxide, which when realesed from burning fuels etc grabs an oxygen and so forms Co2 ..
.. Implies Co2 is a smaller molecule, yet surely it's bigger then 02? What missing? ..
.. could it not also be the case that the cores have trapped Co2 from the ice below them? Can we trust the findings at all really? ..
.. Note the difference for CO2. It's .6 compared to 0, 0.2 or 0.1 with the others, why does it have such variation? ..
.. Strange he is lighter than Co2, so Co2 moves more in because it's smaller fairly clear ..
.. Maybe it's too complicated, and add too many varibles ..
.. Yes, I meant escaped into the atmosphere. From what you have said I'm not sure if you could really say either way .. [/quote. I ’m inclined to agree with that.(I know, I still haven’t responded on Fickian diffusion. I need more time for that one, after all, I’m only a retired engineer).May I just say how enjoyable it is exchanging opinions with you in the spirit of improving understanding rather than scoring points or pushing a particular doctrine. It’s a great shame that on most blogs that I get involved with it ends up simply being a battle by both sides to win an argument.Best regards, Pete Ridley
.. BenV 15/04/2011 22:32:12: .. I appreciate that you may have not received an adequate answer to a question you have put to many scientists, and am pleased and honoured that you would come here to discuss it. I'm also very sorry if no-one here can answer the question to your satisfaction either. Perhaps if you were to email it in to the show we would have an opportunity to put it to an expert in our next climate themed show? ..
.. would have an opportunity to put it to an expert in our next climate themed show? ..