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Quote from: alancalverd on 01/11/2021 23:31:54Even if CO2 were a plausible driver of historic temperature, we still need to find a reason why its concentration varied in the way it did.Historical causes of warming are beside the point, what humans are doing is a unique situation.
Even if CO2 were a plausible driver of historic temperature, we still need to find a reason why its concentration varied in the way it did.
Quote from: Origin on 02/11/2021 11:54:08Quote from: alancalverd on 01/11/2021 23:31:54Even if CO2 were a plausible driver of historic temperature, we still need to find a reason why its concentration varied in the way it did.Historical causes of warming are beside the point, what humans are doing is a unique situation.Unique but probably irrelevant. As the CO2 absorption bands are saturated and the climate over the last 50,000 years has followed the same pattern as 100,000 years previously and several times before that, it seems logical to begin with the premise that the laws of physics haven't changed, so whatever precipitated the rise in temperature (and thus the rise in CO2) in the past, is still functioning. All we have done is to add a bit of CO2 to an already saturated spectrum.
Quote from: alancalverd on 27/10/2021 19:32:56Now either all the published papers on CO2 absorption are wrong or plagiarised from two flawed sources, or the hypothesis that increasing p[CO2] will increase surface temperature is nonsense.The atmosphere absorbs effectively 100% of the radiation at these wavelengths (if you're looking down the whole length of the atmosphere), but the % absorbance or % transmittance or however you choose take your IR spectrum has very little bearing on the greenhouse effect (it's mechanism, magnitude or cause).Even if the atmosphere is treated as 100% opaque to the wavelengths absorbed by CO2, it is straightforward to see that changing the concentration of CO2 will still change the mean free path of the photons that are interacting with CO2.We can think of a photon emitted from the ground and needing to reach "space". It will start out going straight until it runs into a CO2 molecule and gets absorbed, hangs out for a time before being re-emitted in a random direction until it bumps into the next CO2 molecule or escapes to space. Essentially it have to take a random walk from the surface to some altitude sufficiently high. And the time it takes has nothing to do with the speed of light (we can assume it is c for this), but rather in how many stops it has to take (each one being a significant delay compared to whizzing by at c), and how much time is being spent traveling the "correct" way.The higher the CO2 concentration, the shorter the mean free path of the photons.The shorter the mean free path of the photons, the more hops need to be taken to escape (exponentially so!)The more hops needed to escape the slower the rate of energy transfer through the atmosphere.
Now either all the published papers on CO2 absorption are wrong or plagiarised from two flawed sources, or the hypothesis that increasing p[CO2] will increase surface temperature is nonsense.
"Quote from: alancalverd on 29/10/2021 11:01:10Evidence is one thing,And what you presented is another; at least in regard to what you said.You actually said thisQuote from: alancalverd on 28/10/2021 01:45:31water is indeed the problem, and as the ice core data shows, always has been.The ice core record (ironically) does not tell you about water levels in the air.If you really think it does then please give us a link.Quote from: alancalverd on 29/10/2021 11:01:10I cannot find a rational interpretation consistent with CO2 being the driver of historic climate change.Good point- sort of.But inevitable and meaningless.It is true that the historical record does not show CO2 leading a temperature rise.But that's because, prior to mankind getting in on the act, there was no plausible source of CO2 that could materially affect the concentration in the atmosphere.You will not see, at any point in Earth's history a record of what happened when mankind suddenly raised CO2 levels roughly 10 times faster than they have every risen before.Because mankind never did it before.That's more or less the point of anthropogenic climate change. Nobody ever did it before.So it makes no real sense to look at the historical record for a precedent for "today's" events - say the last 200 years.Historical climate change was not driven by anthropogenic CO2.Nobody said it was.But here's the actual explanation of the link between CO2 and climate.TLDR version, it's not been the cause in the past; it has been an amplifier- a positive feedback mechanism enhancing changes due to orbital effects.But it still has the effect of creating warming, even if the initial source isn't orbital variation, but mankind.//www.youtube.com/watch?v=8nrvrkVBt24
Evidence is one thing,
water is indeed the problem, and as the ice core data shows, always has been.
I cannot find a rational interpretation consistent with CO2 being the driver of historic climate change.
Unique but probably irrelevant.
As the CO2 absorption bands are saturated
the climate over the last 50,000 years has followed the same pattern as 100,000 years previously
, it seems logical to begin with the premise that the laws of physics haven't changed
All we have done is to add a bit of CO2 to an already saturated spectrum.
Improbable, and unpopular. Most people think the laws of physics haven't changed since a few milliseconds after the Big Bang.Anyway, rather than argue the toss, I want to measure the intensity of outgoing 15 μm radiation as a function of altitude at night. Can anyone direct me to a suitable commercially available detector? Most of those advertised seem to cut off at 14 μm!
the switch from good old fashioned hydrogen
I have just been informed by the telescreen that half of global warming is atributable to methane
I have just been informed by the telescreen that half of global warming is atributable to methane, this mainly coming from fossil fuels,this would of course tally with the cool records, the switch from good old fashioned hydrogen and increased drilling/population
Anyway, rather than argue the toss, I want to measure the intensity of outgoing 15 μm radiation as a function of altitude at night. Can anyone direct me to a suitable commercially available detector? Most of those advertised seem to cut off at 14 μm!
Why is this graph not flat? Or at least linear? Does the sun do a particularly good job in issuing IR around the peak?
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 02/11/2021 20:06:24I have just been informed by the telescreen that half of global warming is atributable to methane, this mainly coming from fossil fuels,this would of course tally with the cool records, the switch from good old fashioned hydrogen and increased drilling/populationMethane is a significant factor in global warming (and is getting worse, though I'm not sure it's up to 50% just yet...), and is nearly entirely attributable to:• oil and gas exploration/extraction• livestock• decomposing organic waste (garbage heaps)• and more recently, outgassing of permafrost and clathrates. (this is how climate change will get us—if we warm up enough to significantly thaw the permafrost in Siberia and Canada, methane may well become the dominant driver (for a time).
So of that oil and gas and outgassing from bogs is new.
I may move it over to New Theories or That CAN'T Be True if it continues to devolve.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 28/10/2021 19:06:47In that case there must be more more than co2 responsible for the vast majority of heat retention.Not really.
In that case there must be more more than co2 responsible for the vast majority of heat retention.
The result is the formation of NEW water by volume above ground (as vapor).
Quote from: mikewonders on 27/11/2021 14:30:24The result is the formation of NEW water by volume above ground (as vapor).Until it rains.
When, where and how much it rains is the more critical aspect.
Roughly speaking, one gallon of gasoline (or octane equivalent) will produce just over one gallon of H2O.
The rise in ocean levels, volume and surface area cannot be accounted for simply by glacial melt, less precipitation re-deposition cycles.
How many Quintilian and more gallons of NEW water has been evolved ~ 60+ post modern years?
means a net increace of 6000000000 cubic metres of water.
More significantly the burning of fossil fuels creates hot air and movement,