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It cannot be the air as air has a very low heat capacity
The heat capacity of air is about the same as sand or about twice that of steel.
I understand that the normal measure of Heat Capacity is Joules/Kelvin, for 1 mole of the material.
There aren't many moles in a cubic meter of air, but there are quite a few moles in a cubic meter of water, sand, steel or rock.
why are you implicitly using J/K/ m3 (for heat capacity)?
Where (in the world) is the energy from global warming stored?
I find this to be a strange question because heat capacity isn't a number that somehow limits how much thermal energy a substance can hold. What it tells you is the relationship between the thermal energy content of a substance and the subsequent temperature rise that material experiences. You can put the same amount of heat in a substance whether it has a high heat capacity or a low heat capacity. The difference is that the temperature of a substance with a low heat capacity goes up more than one with a high heat capacity.
Given that all materials will warm at a similar rate due to the law of cooling
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 09/06/2022 22:25:19Given that all materials will warm at a similar rate due to the law of coolingI don't think that's true. Surely you've gotten into a hot car before and noticed that the metal parts can feel much hotter than the other components? An object colored black will tend to heat up in sunlight faster than one colored white.
I feel you are doing your best to be objectionable.
Please do not clutter this thread with posts of a non sensical nature.
. If global warming was in anyway comparable to a car in sunlight
we could just wind down the window or park it in the shade to solve it.
I feel you are doing your best to be objectionable. Please do not clutter this thread with posts of a non sensical nature.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 10/06/2022 00:22:11I feel you are doing your best to be objectionable.I'm trying to be technically accurate. Why you think that is "objectionable", I don't know.Quote from: Petrochemicals on 10/06/2022 00:22:11Please do not clutter this thread with posts of a non sensical nature.Please point out what in my post was nonsensical. I'll admit that I was wrong if you can provide a good source that shows that I was.Quote from: Petrochemicals on 10/06/2022 00:22:11. If global warming was in anyway comparable to a car in sunlightIt's actually rather similar: in both cases, the electromagnetic radiation from the Sun is being captured at a rate faster than it can be re-emitted into space. That makes both the car and the Earth heat up.Quote from: Petrochemicals on 10/06/2022 00:22:11we could just wind down the window or park it in the shade to solve it.Putting a giant shade between the Sun and the Earth could, indeed, solve global warming. Again, it's the same principle: you reduce the incoming electromagnetic radiation from the Sun when you park a car in the shade and you could theoretically do the same if you put up a shade between the Earth and Sun that blocked some of the incoming radiation.
You have a very strange definition of spam. The question posed by this thread was already answered by alancalverd anyway.
Yes well go and park the earth in the shade then or wind down the window. If not stop spamming a thread about heat storage and I'll tell nasa your warming cure fell through.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 11/06/2022 07:05:22Yes well go and park the earth in the shade then or wind down the window. If not stop spamming a thread about heat storage and I'll tell nasa your warming cure fell through. NASA already have versions of this on their ideas list.Please stop responding to reasonable posts with this:Quote from: Petrochemicals on 10/06/2022 00:22:11 I feel you are doing your best to be objectionable. Please do not clutter this thread with posts of a non sensical nature.
Alancalverd's answer wasn't nonsense, it was the truth. If the air, land and water are getting warmer, then they are storing more thermal energy than they were before. Obviously, the energy that causes a material to heat up is stored in the material itself. I don't know how any other answer would make sense.