0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
When, where, by whom were observations/experiments done, since 1978, to validate statements made about the GHGE?My point. Climate scientists measure the temperature of the atmosphere close to the land surface (about 1.5m above the surface). This is not the same as the actual surface temperature. On a sunny day, the surface is considerably warmer than the air above. At nighttime, the atmosphere above can often be warmer than the surface.
1. Is the carbon dioxide (CO2) greenhouse gas effect (GHGE) due to CO2 "trapping" heat?
2. Does GHGE warm earth by emitting less outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) to space?
"there is a decrease in the rate that energy is getting from the surface to the top of the atmosphere"
What are the magnitudes of surface warming due to downwelling longwave infrared (LWIR) "forcing". Per material, especially, most especially, for water? Because water covers 71% of earth's surface, and LWIR penetrates mere micrometres into water.
I noticed both replies ignored my 3rd question, which I shall copy in again (because it is short).
Please see the attached chart. The source of my image is: Dewitter & Clerbaux; Remote Sensing 2018, 10, 1539; doi:10.3390/rs10101539 It plots 4 OLR sources, 3 fully and 1 partly over the past 33 years. It shows 2W/m² more OLR today than in 1985.
Quote"there is a decrease in the rate that energy is getting from the surface to the top of the atmosphere"You did not actually say less OLR was being emitted to space, but you implied it.The research I've done shows that more OLR is emitted to space today than 33 years ago. Care to explain the paradox?Please see the attached chart. The source of my image is: Dewitter & Clerbaux; Remote Sensing 2018, 10, 1539; doi:10.3390/rs10101539 It plots 4 OLR sources, 3 fully and 1 partly over the past 33 years. It shows 2W/m² more OLR today than in 1985.
Has any experiment ever been done to discover the hypothetical warming of water?