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I never said that ozone influences whether or not the skies are red.
When I said CO2 + H2O > CH2O + O2 my theory hung itself.
Not sure why you're bring red into it for.
it is a waste of time to post anything other than accepted science
How did a rise in 100 ppm allow for a 1º kelvin temperature increase when the other 300 ppm is responsible for the first 287º kelvin temperature?
It's possible that the tropopause acts as a prism.
With the ozone layer, the emission spectrum of O, and O2 moves towards 450 nm
which so much color would suggest a reasonable amount of energy.
it is a waste of time to post anything other than accepted science.
Quote from: JLindgaard on 14/10/2022 23:19:43it is a waste of time to post anything other than accepted science. No. It is a waste of time to post anything that contradicts a common observation. Like red sunsets.
Quote from: JLindgaardHow did a rise in 100 ppm allow for a 1º kelvin temperature increase when the other 300 ppm is responsible for the first 287º kelvin temperature? The Sun.I understand that a "black body" located at the Earth's orbit will have a temperature of about -15C.- The atmospheric blanket warms up the Earth above this -15C- The main components are Nitrogen, Oxygen, Argon, water vapour and Carbon dioxide.- Together, they warm the planet by about 29C- The impact of water vapour is very variable due to the effects of evaporation, precipitation and reflective clouds- But the carbon dioxide is well-mixed, and affects the whole planet.- So 300ppm CO2 does not warm the planet by 287K; it warms the planet by a fraction of 29K.- An increase from 300ppm to 400ppm CO2 warms the planet by a larger fraction of 29Khttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmosphere
So you're saying that the tropopasue isn't a barrier and that a prism is not a barrier?
We'll have to disagree.
Quote from: JLindgaard on 15/10/2022 14:28:28 So you're saying that the tropopasue isn't a barrier and that a prism is not a barrier? The only one who mentioned a barrier was you...
Who knows, maybe testing of thermonuclear weapons started global warming.
Maybe in here but researchers have said it is.
You're a chemist so it is not surprising that you haven't taken the time to learn about the tropopause.
And since the tropopause is mostly a layer of nitrogen, can it act as a prism?
Quote from: JLindgaard on Today at 03:02:16 It's possible that the tropopause acts as a prism.Not really, no.
This is if I were to consider the energy released by munitions during WW II was responsible for the global temperature spike during those years.
...and global warming began about 15,000 years ago.However, the reason the sky is blue is because the hard green stuff is called land, the wet stuff is called sea, and the blue gas on top is called sky. It's a matter of definition, not physics! Trust a pilot - we like the blue stuff best, and even have an instrument (the artificial horizon) with a blue bit at the top, to remind us which way to point the plane.
Also notice if after a warm period it can cool down
Quote from: JLindgaard on 15/10/2022 23:28:52Also notice if after a warm period it can cool down That's pretty much the definition of "after".Did you think it was important?