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Just a query as to why the one bottle is so much brighter, given they are both curved surfaces, they are not pressured are they?
Quote from: mikewonders on 25/12/2021 17:50:45@ Alan... from //www.youtube.com/watch?v=kwtt51gvaJQ [nofollow] we see a simple experiment to demonstrate CO2 greenhouse in a bottle.Even more impressive when things like Andrews liver salts are an endothermic reaction, the water will be noticeably cooler. Just a query as to why the one bottle is so much brighter, given they are both curved surfaces, they are not pressured are they?
@ Alan... from //www.youtube.com/watch?v=kwtt51gvaJQ [nofollow] we see a simple experiment to demonstrate CO2 greenhouse in a bottle.
[...] the above is quite misleading, bicarbonate of soda and water are exothermic, as in release heat. This is about as credible as Vladimir putin opening the valve on a Gazprom gas cylinder, coming back half an hour later and stating that methane cools the environment.
Actually after a bit of research the above is quite misleading, bicarbonate of soda and water are exothermic, as in release heat.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 26/12/2021 18:51:12Actually after a bit of research the above is quite misleading, bicarbonate of soda and water are exothermic, as in release heat.The decomposition of bicarbonate to give CO2 and sodium carbonate is endothermic.The reaction of bicarbonate and an acid like citric is also endothermic.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 26/12/2021 18:51:12[...] the above is quite misleading, bicarbonate of soda and water are exothermic, as in release heat. This is about as credible as Vladimir putin opening the valve on a Gazprom gas cylinder, coming back half an hour later and stating that methane cools the environment. Is that to say that Alka Seltzer in water doesn't produce CO2?, e.g. the underlying theme of the example? Why then did the thermometer read an increase in temperature versus the untreated control bottle (assuming all others equal)? Possibly the old boy is a conspirator pushing the envelope on global warming so he warmed the bottle off camera? Hmmmmm. Hard to tell right? Not. Next?
Nope it is to say it produces heat.
Conclusion: if a chemist tells you are reaction is endothermic, there's a jolly good chance that it is.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 26/12/2021 21:26:54Conclusion: if a chemist tells you are reaction is endothermic, there's a jolly good chance that it is.I'm a Chemical Engineer by trade and I always defer to a Chemist.
I can tell you the release of pressurised methane in the ground cools the environment.
Perhaps the old boy is a conspirator
it is just as easy to ask why the increace in co2 is not seen as proportional to temperature, after all 300ppm co2 and 300k - - - >400ppm 400k
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 26/12/2021 20:38:52Perhaps the old boy is a conspirator Quoteit is just as easy to ask why the increace in co2 is not seen as proportional to temperature, after all 300ppm co2 and 300k - - - >400ppm 400kThere isn't a simple, linear relationship, that's why.
This is
proof that co2 is inherantly divisive in climate change
Turns out that you are quite right about sodium bicarbonate Kryptid
As far as I can tell, any complaints that Alan has laid against CO2 as a cause of warming
Quote from: Bored chemist on 26/12/2021 23:52:19As far as I can tell, any complaints that Alan has laid against CO2 as a cause of warmingI have no complaint. I just await an explanation of historic data based on the hypothesis that CO2 is the primary driver of global temperature. All that is required is an answer to 1. Why the temperature graph always preceded the CO2 graph2. Why temperature has risen sharply then decreased slowly with a 100,000 year cycle3. What determines the very consistent maximum and minimum4. Even if we ignore 1, where did the CO2 suddenly come from and where did it go to? (recognizing that the volcanic ash data is generally not in phase with it)
Mike: by "historic" I mean prehistoric, taking for example the last 400,000 years' data revealed by the Vostok ice cores.