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If the temperature rises, so does the dewpoint for any given concentration of H2O
1. Depends on the finesse of your analysis.
Alancalverd has a strong argument that the current rise in temperature is a natural phenomenon.
As I already pointed out to you, the current rise is about 100 times faster than the previous ones.
So, do you see why I don't really care much about what happened ages ago.
But water can't spontaneously cause the heating.
Air with a concentration of 17.3 grams of water per cubic metre has a dewpoint of 20C.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 24/07/2023 11:36:22So, do you see why I don't really care much about what happened ages ago.Pity, that. Scientific evidence is usually the results of experiments previously conducted.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 24/07/2023 11:36:22Air with a concentration of 17.3 grams of water per cubic metre has a dewpoint of 20C.And if you heat your sample to 30 C, does the RH increase, decrease or stay the same?
Compared with the average (1 degree every 800 - 1000 years), yes, but within that average we have some very sharp spikes, particularly near the maximum. Perspective, my friend!
Nobody said it does
4. It seems most probable to me that the cycle is driven by water, not CO2, which is completely out of human control
but IPCC has stated that it is the most important greenhouse gas, and I'm sure you wouldn't disagree with such an ex cathedra statement.
Was mankind dumping CO2 into the air back then?Or was it a completely different experiment?
Did you not read what I said, or did you not read what you said?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 24/07/2023 12:43:14Did you not read what I said, or did you not read what you said?You won't get nucleation and precipitation until the RH reaches ~100%. So the hotter the atmosphere gets, the more water it can hold before it rains, and (thanks to the greenhouse effect) the hotter it gets, until something (ice cloud cover? there's nothing else) reduces the heat input.
Since the CO2 IR absorption lines are all saturated
But what you said was still wrong, wasn't it.You said thisQuote from: alancalverd on Today at 11:10:33If the temperature rises, so does the dewpoint for any given concentration of H2OAnd, as I pointed out, reality is thisQuote from: Bored chemist on Today at 11:36:22Air with a concentration of 17.3 grams of water per cubic metre has a dewpoint of 20C.