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Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
DrTsk - Given that the radius of the Earth is ~6350km, and changes in top of troposphere are <1km, effective area changes are a trivial influence. And more than balanced by the fact that lower pressure requires a slightly higher temperature (as there are fewer molecules) to emit the same energy. However, those all represent very small changes in the spectra. -
Kiwiiano at 08:15 AM on 29 February 2012Mythbusting with fewer explosions
owl905: Neville Chamberlain knew damn well what he was up against, he also knew that the British military were woefully wound down and ill-prepared for the inevitable. The "peace in our time" was a charade to give them time to frantically remobilise and rearm. back to the topic.... ;^) -
DrTsk at 07:57 AM on 29 February 2012Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
@11/boba/Kevin As the altitude increases the effective area increases and so the same amount of energy can be radiated at a slightly lower temperature -
scaddenp at 07:55 AM on 29 February 2012Radiative Balance, Feedback, and Runaway Warming
Camburn - it is GC's link unified theory of climate. Spenser has take on it by the way too - see his 30 Dec 2011 article. -
Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
boba, Kevin C - As the effective emission altitude increases, and given that the lapse rate means cooler air at higher altitudes, the amount of energy radiated to space will (initially) decrease. That means less energy leaving the atmosphere, and the climate warms. To a first order approximation, the atmosphere warms enough that the effective altitude is emitting same amount as the incoming energy - so it ends up near the same temperature (although pressure effects play into it as well), radiating away the same energy as before. -
scaddenp at 07:47 AM on 29 February 2012It's the sun
ShadedX - sorry but it doesnt follow. The path for stellar evolution is that heat from the sun will rise very very slowly (and has been doing so through geological time). As fuel is spent, it will expand and eventually engulf the inner planets, including possibly earth. But not for a few billion years. -
Kevin C at 07:41 AM on 29 February 2012Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
boba: I believe that is the case. My crude explanation of the effect is that the increase in CO2 content increases the opacity of the whole column of gas. However the gas gets thinner as you go up, reducing the opacity. At some point the opacity gets low enough that a good proportion of the IR photons can escape without further re-absorption. As the opacity of the whole column increases due to increasing CO2, that height gets higher. I think it must be rather more complex than that though, because the emitted radiation higher up is at a lower temperature. Which means there are different number of photons being emitted in the transparent and opaque bands. I presume that codes like MODTRAN have to deal with that. -
RonManley at 07:40 AM on 29 February 2012Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
It was predicted that one of the fingerprints of climate change would be warming of the troposphere at around 10 km altitude. I did my own analysis a few years ago and showed that this was indeed the case. -
New research from last week 8/2012
keithpickering - Good references. One important point in the discussions of those threads is that a step-change (although easy to fit to the data) is not meaningful unless the underlying physics would include such a step change. The model fit to the data has to make physical sense - and 'step changes' with large instantaneous energy changes really do not. -
Alexandre at 07:05 AM on 29 February 2012Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
Steve Case: don't know if you challenge the accepted climate sensitivity, but denialists claims don't really know many boundaries. They freely wander from denying the warming, to denying the causes, to opposing the policies... and back step 1. One claim can be refuted, but moving goalposts are impossible to catch up with, specially in the attention span available from the broader audience. Like the Denial Tango goes, "I'm skeptical of everything I just don't wanna know". -
keithpickering at 07:03 AM on 29 February 2012New research from last week 8/2012
Regarding Jones and step-change, Tamino has dealt with that pretty convincingly, here, here, and here. Basically, it's pretty easy to show that a step-change model is statistically better than a no-change model. It's a lot harder to show that it's better than linear, or that it's the best possible model. -
boba10960 at 07:00 AM on 29 February 2012Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
Tom Curtis: Thanks for the very helpful information! A related point has been unclear to me for a long time and I wonder if you can clarify it for me. Does the average altitude from which IR radiation is lost to space from the atmosphere depend on the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere? If so, then how does this affect the overall greenhouse process? There were comments at this site some time ago (too long for me to find them now) that led me to believe that increasing the CO2 content of the atmosphere raises the average altitude from which IR radiation escaped to space. Ever since that time I have wondered how that works (if true), and your post has stimulated me to ask. Thanks, Bob -
scaddenp at 06:59 AM on 29 February 2012Radiative Balance, Feedback, and Runaway Warming
So GC, as a physicist, how "skeptical" have you been of this unpublished work? And how do you reconcile it with say the standard physics of Grant & Petty? -
Alexandre at 06:58 AM on 29 February 2012Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
Nice post, Tom. It's an effective way to explain physics through the knowledge people intuitively already have. -
Eric (skeptic) at 06:51 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
CBDunkerson, thanks for the info on evaporation. I would argue that is part of the exponential decay of the bulk of excess rainfall measured in river levels (i.e. when the rains return, the preceding evaporation will dictate river levels.) Australia seems to have some fascinating exceptions in some cases being low and flat, I'll have to comment more in that thread. In the meantime here's the Mississippi which I saw in 1993 in St Louis; needless to say it left an impression. http://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/dv?cb_00060=on&format=gif_default&begin_date=1993-01-01&end_date=1997-01-01&site_no=07010000&referred_module=sw If the link above works it should show the relatively rapid decay of very large volumes of flow, but also a slow decay, on the order of a year or two from the enormous flood of 1993. I don't know how much of that is rainfall patterns and how much is water storage. But it does reflect both the direct runoff and the indirect evaporation (that lowers direct runoff); both of which lower the amount of water stored. -
Bob Lacatena at 06:40 AM on 29 February 2012Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
1, Steve Case, Not to pile on too much, but... Very few people don't believe in the greenhouse effect. Very few people don't believe the earth is warming. Very few people don't believe that fossil fuels are the cause. Very few people don't believe warming will be bad. Very few people don't believe feedbacks will make it worse. Very few people don't believe that Arctic ice melt is related to warming. Very few people don't believe that... The list goes on and on. That's what is so wonderful about denial. There are so very many delicious flavors to choose from! And you can always couch your own particular passion with "well, yes, of course that's true, but..." And so there is a very, very large denial choir, all singing different songs, out of tune, at the tops of their lungs, and it adds up to inaction and ignorance. So every step along the way the most obvious things must be explained, as clearly and as simply as possible, so that bit by bit the cacophony of that very large and very diverse choir will slowly but surely, member by reluctant member, start to sing the same, harmonious song... and cut the crap and let us get on with the arduous task of fixing the problem rather than arguing about whether or not science is science. -
DrTsk at 06:26 AM on 29 February 2012Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
Steve Case, You are preaching to a very large choir. Very few people disagree that the green house effect operates But the choir must do its job too!! People, like YOGI, elsa, and their cohorts that are spouting their giberrish should be countered strongly and permanently. -
owl905 at 06:19 AM on 29 February 2012New research from last week 8/2012
AGW Observer is an excellent resource site. The draft of the Cohen et. al. is a clue in the puzzle. Right around the fastest warming subsystem on the planet is the Taiga bucking the global trend - Figure 3 after the body. The value is seeing it as a long-term exception and not just the headline maker of a few recent winters. The other early interest-point is the AO influence (Figure S4) - the MERRA re-analysis observation is strong negatives (high pressure) AO trends where the model ensemble reflects the current recordings of slight positive. It has no effect on the Taiga anomaly observation. It will have a strong influence on forming conclusions about the anomaly. -
Phila at 05:41 AM on 29 February 2012Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
Steve Case, You are preaching to a very large choir. Very few people disagree that the green house effect operates Yes, very few people disagree with this. But unfortunately, they're represented in relatively high numbers in "skeptical" circles, which makes this post timely and necessary. Personally, I've debated "skeptics" who didn't know that there's a difference in seasons between the northern and southern hemispheres, and who assumed that snow storms are basically impossible on a warming planet. I've also dealt with "skeptics" who assume that carbon dioxide can't affect the climate because it's heavier than oxygen. And believe it or not, they don't necessarily back off when you point out that atmospheric gases don't form layers based on weight, as evidenced by the fact that we haven't all been asphyxiated. As we've seen again and again, this is what happens when a political movement exploits public ignorance for its own gain: After a while, no fact is too simple or obvious to require a clear explanation. That's why people on the scientific side of this argument have to work so much harder than "skeptics" who can spout any pseudoscientific gibberish that flatters people's prejudices. -
Prof P. Body at 05:39 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
@ Camburn Could you be a good chap and elaborate on your claim you made earlier that"ARGO data, while short, shows a reduction in THC of the oceans in the 0-700M volume."
Looking at the source you reference (comment 29)"DB@56: Refer to Rob Painting at 29 of this thread. He posted the temperature data of the 0-700M volume."
For the life of my sainted mother, all I see is the graphic Rob P. posted from Roemmich and Gilson 2011, but not any data. If memory serves, Roemmich and Gilson 2011 focus on the Argo 2005-2010 dataset, of which one might construe Rob P's graphic to be representative. Can you share with us the significance testing you used to examine the data from Roemmich and Gilson 2011? I presume you actually went back to the source data itself to make your claim...right? It would be a deucedly tight bit to have the stones to use that, what is it called again? Eyecrometer? In lieu of actual analysis, what? Also, when you impute that there is a reduction, to what are you comparing the 2005-2010 dataset? Because it would seem to either nothing or itself. Naught very scientific of you, old bean. -
Camburn at 05:38 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
Tom@88: That you for the compliment. Always appreciated. The widget works well for areas that I know about. And I do know the Mississippi watershed veryyyyy well, as well as the Red River Watershed. Greenland is self explanatory. South America is in my farm news eyecromiter daily, as well as Asia because Asia is a large buyer of commodities. Thanks again. -
Camburn at 05:31 AM on 29 February 2012Radiative Balance, Feedback, and Runaway Warming
Chris: Can you post a link to the WUWT thread you are talking about? I go there on occasion, yet seem to have missed that thread. I would like to read what arguement is the deathbed of AGW. Thank you. -
Rob Painting at 05:28 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
Tom Curtis - "With regard to the overall balance, unfortunately I do not have figures. The graph shown above was prepared by Josh Willis of NASA, who indicated that it at least partially explained the drop in sea level. I assume, therefore, that he has done a balance which shows a net accumulation of surface water in 2010. I am not aware of its having been published' A paper by Carmen Boening (NASA JPL) on this subject should be out soon. Last time I checked she informed me it should be out in the early part of this year. I'll incorporate it into the advanced rebuttal of: Sea level fell in 2010. -
Rob Painting at 05:17 AM on 29 February 2012New research from last week 5/2012
Rob Murphy - I'm writing up a rebuttal to that meme. The temperature of the troposphere has an effect on cloud formation and height - cooler = lower cloud top height, and warmer = higher cloud top height. The details are a lot more complicated of course. As you point out, the trend over the 'noughties' was weak ENSO (La Nina/El Nino) at the beginning of the decade, and strong ENSO at the end. The La Nina centred on 2008 was particularly strong and lasted for 22 consecutive months. So it's hardly surprising the trend over the decade was toward lower cloud height. There's no evidence this is a negative feedback, that's just a 'Chicken Licken' interpretation of the evidence. -
Chris Colose at 05:08 AM on 29 February 2012Radiative Balance, Feedback, and Runaway Warming
It is always amazing to see how many radical paradigm shifts occur at WUWT and yet never get published, appear in any textbooks, or get discussed by the broader community. If WUWT were always right, essentially all sub-disciplines of climate, planetary science, astronomy, etc would need radical revision. Now since most have us have grown up to feel the need to glorify everyone's pet theory and opinions, and that many have a "Galileo" interpretation of how science generally advances, I suspect it won't be good enough to ask people to think about the above paragraph and have some self-skepticism. I also doubt it would be good enough to ask people who believe that sort of stuff to go buy a thermodynamics and radiation textbook, because I'm quite confident they have no interest. Of course, everyone at WUWT have bought into the argument as the deathbed of AGW, just like every other post they out up there, even if those other posts completely contradict that idea (such as Lindzen's post, which recognizes the existence of a greenhouse effect, but thinks sensitivity is very low). The only reasonable comments I've seen on that thread are from Joel Shore, who also co-authored the rebuttal (wuth me, and others) the Gerlich and Tscheuschner nonsense). I defer you to his points because I don't think it's worth discussing much. Needless to say, the article does not understand why convection occurs, or how to apply the laws of thermodynamics. It sort of gives the impression that none of this has been thought of before, yet it forms the foundation of basic atmospheric science and is taught in every undergrad atmospheric science department I know of. -
Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
Camburn - Visual assessment of that map will not be reliable. For that you need to actually run the numbers, not the eyecrometer. Lake impoundment, ground water impoundment, ongoing precipitation increasing the water mass despite increased drainage - none of these mass shifts are 'single events' which might then drain, they are part of a pattern of precipitation shifts due to the recent La Nina's. I would look for Willis to publish on the topic. In the meantime, I would take his opinion as to mass shifts to land, as supported by his data, to indicate a partial explanation for recent reductions in SLR. And until/unless you have contradictory global data, that's the best information we have. -
Tom Curtis at 04:35 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
I must congratulate Camburn on having so advanced an eyecrometer; and congratulate him still further for having the foresight of adding a widget that always allows him to see only what he wants to see. -
Camburn at 04:30 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
1. It is very obvious when looking at the map above that the excess/deficit water in North and South America basically cancel each other out. 2. Even tho the Northern Area of Greenland is accumulating water, Greenland as a whole is loosing mass. This loss of mass has not slowed down even tho it has snowed more on the northern area. The blue area of Greenland then becomes a net contributor to SLR, not a deficit. 3. According to Tom, Australia is a basin and has very slow run off. I will believe him without requesting documenation, as local knowledge and observations provide 1st hand evidence. 4. The drought areas of Asian and Africa bascially cancel each other out as they are very simliar in magnitude. One a deficit, one a surplus. The only exceptionally wet years appear to have affected Australia, but on a continental basis of other continents, the dry and wet areas appear to cancel each other out. -
Tom Curtis at 04:24 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
Eric (skeptic) @84, some of the floods of 2010 will have drained very quickly. The Pakistani floods, for example. But except on the coastal fringe, the Australian floods do not. As I have noted elsewhere flood water in Queensland takes 9-10 months to reach Lake Eyre (for the more western waters, and a similar period to reach the mouth of the Murray (for the more Eastern waters). Even the Victorian floods took up to a month to drain away, and probably a couple of months to reach the mouth of the Murray. That is probably atypical, but as the example of the Nile shows, not exceptionally so. It is certainly far from atypical once you include the effect of frozen precipitation not thawing until summer (in some regions) or of dams and the filling of lakes, or in one instance the partial refilling of the Aral Sea. With regard to the overall balance, unfortunately I do not have figures. The graph shown above was prepared by Josh Willis of NASA, who indicated that it at least partially explained the drop in sea level. I assume, therefore, that he has done a balance which shows a net accumulation of surface water in 2010. I am not aware of its having been published. Finally, this will be my last post on surface waters effect on sea level on this thread, where it is significantly of topic. If you want to continue the conversation, may I suggest the thread of my first link. -
CBDunkerson at 04:18 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
Eric wrote: "I am mostly looking at when the bulk of the water exits through the rivers." The bulk of it doesn't exit through the rivers. Average annual precipitation on land is about 26,000 mi^3 of water. Average annual evaporation from land is about 17,000 mi^3 of water. That leaves ~9,000 mi^3, a little over a third, to be lost through runoff into rivers and other means (e.g. subsurface flow). This assumes balanced flows, which is true for a long term average but not for individual years (such as the recent exceptionally wet years). Also: "There is no doubt, for example, that the bulk of the waters of record floods that you talk about drain very quickly." 'Very quickly' is a meaningless term without some sort of frame of reference. The few months it usually takes for half of the precipitation which falls on land to be removed is indeed 'very quick' on a geological time scale. -
Eric (skeptic) at 03:52 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
Tom, do the drier areas of earth offset the wetter ones like Australia? Is there anywhere I can get totals? Specific to your arguments above, I am mostly looking at when the bulk of the water exits through the rivers. There is an exponential decay and you and I have to identify which part of the curve we are talking about. The higher the starting point, the faster the decay. There is no doubt, for example, that the bulk of the waters of record floods that you talk about drain very quickly. OTOH, a look at the mighty Mississippi at St Louis shows a few years of higher flow at a time and I need to identify how much of that is a wet pattern and how much is the decay from previous wet periods. -
Tom Curtis at 03:38 AM on 29 February 2012Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
Steve Case @1, I am glad that you are part of that very large choir, and hope you make sure you sing your part when that theory is challenged, as if frequently is, at WUWT and other so called "skeptic" sites. My experience has been, however, that even these basics are challenged frequently and vehemently by many so-called "skeptics", while others who should know better stand idly by, or egg them on. -
Steve Case at 03:30 AM on 29 February 2012Greenhouse Effect Basics: Warm Earth, Cold Atmosphere
You are preaching to a very large choir. Very few people disagree that the green house effect operates and that doubling of CO2 ought to raise the temperature about 1.2°C. Here's what it says in Chapter 8 of the IPCC's AR4: 8.6.2.3 What Explains the Current Spread in Models’ Climate Sensitivity Estimates?- In the idealised situation that the climate response to a doubling of atmospheric CO2 consisted of a uniform temperature change only, with no feedbacks operating (but allowing for the enhanced radiative cooling resulting from the temperature increase), the global warming from GCMs would be around 1.2°C (Hansen et al., 1984; Bony et al., 2006).
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Robert Murphy at 03:22 AM on 29 February 2012New research from last week 5/2012
Concerning the Davies and Molloy paper; I'm having trouble seeing the data as indicating a negative cloud feedback to global temperature change. Wouldn't such a feedback mean that an increase in temperature would cause a decrease in cloud height, and vice versa? And wouldn't such a feedback be very quick with little lag? Looking at the cloud height graph over the ten year period used, sometimes temperature goes up and clouds go lower, and sometimes they go up and down in tandem. It's also a very short time frame. Above is the graph from Davies and Molloy (top) showing cloud cover height anomaly from 2000-2010 and a WoodForTrees graph of UAH temperature anomalies (bottom) for the same period (I didn't perfectly line them up in Photoshop - the bottom graph is slightly offset to the right). Other data sets show similar ups and downs, especially for the second half of the graph. During the first couple of years, temperature goes up and cloud height decreases. The 2004 dip in temperature doesn't seem to show up in cloud height. In the last few years, temperature and cloud height mostly go up and down together. Look at that big dip in cloud height centered around 2008. Notice that's right at the height of the La Nina, and also that it's the coldest time in the ten year period. How does that support a negative cloud feedback to rising temperatures? I freely admit I'm probably missing something and I realize how dangerous relying on the eye-crometer can be. I'm also curious as to why 2010 and 2011 (or most of it) were not included. Does it take that long to tabulate the data? The paper was submitted 11/30/2011. I'm wondering if they are just using the overall trend of decreasing cloud height and the increasing trend in temperature (for some data sets but not all for that time period) and seeing a correlation that doesn't have a causation. I know they do speak candidly of the need for another decade of data to see how cloud height reacts, so they are aware of the possible tenuousness of the link. I've already seen the "Study shows cloud feedback is large and negative" meme pop up on places like WUWT. I'd like to have something to say as a counter. -
Tom Curtis at 02:59 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
Eric (skeptic) @81, the amount of time from rainfall to run off to the sea depends critically on a number of facts of geography which are highly variable across different regions in the world. For example, rainfall in Ethiopia can take half a year to reach the sea even as direct run off due to the shere length of the Nile through which it flows. Rainfall from around Texas, Qld can take as much as a year to reach the mouth of the Murray. That excludes water that enters aquifers. Water entering surface aquifers in central Qld will never reach the sea by drainage. Therefore a simple assumption that rainfall will reach the sea in weeks or a few months at most (as made by Camburn) is completely unwarranted as a generalization. (I am not concentrating on QLD because it is typical, but only because it is familiar.) Furthermore, Camburn's argument that the rainfall would all reach the sea in short duration is premised on the absurd assumption that most of the rainfall occurred at the same time. Because floods are not typically coincident, major flooding in different regions at different times can result in increased global surface water for extended periods. This applies even to individual regions. Victoria experienced major flooding in 2010, record breaking flooding in early 2011, and is now threatened with new record breaking floods. I have elsewhere detailed Queensland's new record for flood effected area in March of 2010, which was smashed in Dec 2010/ Jan 2011 by almost a factor of three, and has been followed up by record breaking flood depths (not extent) in new floods in South West Qld in Feb of this year. My list is not exhaustive for these two states. In the face of records like that, Camburn's argument about runoff times, in addition to failing on its merits, is clearly seen for what it is - an evasion. Finally, all of this debate is beside the point. If you look at the GRACE image @65 above, you will see it is a years worth of data. That is, averaged over a year, Australia had the equivalent of a layer of water 3 to 5 cms across its entire surface. Of course, most of that water was in ground water, or fuller rivers and lakes, and of course in periods of intense flooding. But it is the effect over a year. In the face of that, arguing that water runs of in a week or so so it cannot have a year long effect on sea levels is obtuse, to say the least. -
dunc461 at 02:56 AM on 29 February 2012Climate change models underestimate future temperature variability; food security at risk
Even without the effects of climate change on food production it is going to be a serious problem. Apparently there are 3,411,327,592 acres of arable land and 12,067,879,561 acres of agricultural land which includes arable land, permanent crops and permanent pastures. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arable_land Per the Oak Ridge National Laboratory there are 3,657,159,639 acres of cultivated and permanent crop land leaving 8,410,719,923 acres of pasture. http://daac.ornl.gov/NPP/other_files/worldnpp1.txt At a world population of 7 billion that equates to 0.52 acres/person of crop land and 1.2 acres per person of pasture . But not all crop land is used to produce food. 388,888,889 acres are used to produce grain for beer. Table 8 below plus http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beer http://cruisenews.net/brewing/ 85,992,673 acres of cotton http://unctad.org/infocomm/anglais/cotton/market.htm#prod and 47,196,385 acres of grapes for wine http://www.wineinstitute.org/files/WorldWineProductionbyCountry.pdf http://www.boutiquewineries.com.au/articles/HowManyGrapesinaBottleofWine.cfm Subtracting this acreage from the total crop land reduces the acres/person for crops to 0.45. The Median UN projection for 2050 is 9.2 billion reducing the numbers with no change in land use to 0.34 and 0.91 acres/person respectively. Based on data from Table 8 http://books.google.com/books?id=vHprLAOlOkYC&pg=PA43&lpg=PA43&dq=what+crops+has+the+highest+caloric+yield&source=bl&ots=pv1C7ha9Kj&sig=UYSqCeS_PYvoWJX40Vthsl1siIM&hl=en&sa=X&ei=dJAmT-f-Luna0QH3gfnbCA&sqi=2&ved=0CDkQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=what%20crops%20has%20the%20highest%20caloric%20yield&f=false It takes 0.45 acres of wheat to produce 2000 calories/day and 0.36 acres of rice, 0.26 acres for yams and sweet potatoes and 0.15 for Cassava. Clearly we can feed the projected world population in 2050 if we all become vegetarians or Ovo-lacto vegetarians. Based on a 2000 calorie/day diet, with 550 calories/day (`6 ounces) of protein from equal parts chicken, eggs, pork and beef I estimate the protein for one person would take 1.4 acres, with fruits, vegetables, grain, dairy and oil taking another 0.36 acres. Substituting soybeans for meat would drop the total to 0.39 acres /person. Elimination of dairy would reduce the total further to 0.17 acres /person. There were too many sources used to develop this information to site here. I think I have developed the concept far enough to indicate that there will be strong pressure in the future to convert more land to cropland for food production, with a possible significant increase in carbon emissions, especially if we start using crop land to produce bio-fuels or site solar cells. -
CBDunkerson at 02:56 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
Eric wrote: "Surface water decays in days." Ummm... you've never seen a lake? Or snow? Technically if they ever 'decay' (by which I assume you mean the mass of water decreases) at all then whatever time frame that takes place in could be measured in "days"... but the '~11,680,000 days' the water of the Great Salt Lake has existed thus far would be a fairly ridiculous method of measurement. It is decaying, and presumably will eventually disappear entirely... but we are talking about alot of days. -
Eric (skeptic) at 02:47 AM on 29 February 2012Postma disproved the greenhouse effect
I think the link in post 53 should be: http://skepticalscience.com/argument.php?p=1&t=55&&a=509#75803Response:[DB] Fixed, thanks!
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Eric (skeptic) at 02:23 AM on 29 February 2012Postma disproved the greenhouse effect
Thanks Tom. I read that absorptivity and emissivity were equal for an object in thermal equilibrium and figured that covered it. But the arguments I read (pages and pages) talk (vaguely) about physical processes at the surface of the object with individual photons rather than the net amounts of emissivity, absorptivity and energy. -
Eric (skeptic) at 02:18 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
Tom, I am taking major rivers and looking at the exponential decay of their flow after rains and after wet periods. Surface water decays in days. Ground water takes weeks to several months, but no more than that. For example the Potomac a major river near me has a few month decay at most (log scale): http://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/dv?cb_00060=on&format=gif_default&begin_date=2010-02-27&end_date=2012-02-27&site_no=01646500&referred_module=sw -
Tom Curtis at 01:44 AM on 29 February 2012Postma disproved the greenhouse effect
Eric (skeptic) @51, if the emitting body does not absorb in the same wavelengths of light as well as it emits, then it is in violation of Kirchoff's Law of Thermal Radiation. As Kirchoff's Law is a special case of the 2nd law of thermodynamics, that would also mean it is a violation of the second law of thermodynamics. There are some nuances here. If emissivity is greater than zero at a given wavelength (ie, the body radiates in that wavelength, then it must absorb some of the reflected radiation, but will not absorb all of it unless the emissivity and hence absorptivity is 1, ie, the body is "black" at that wavelength. Because some radiation is absorbed, the body will warm up if it is otherwise in thermal equilibrium. If the mirror is so arranged that all light emitted or reflected from a section of the body is reflected back to the same section of the body, then radiation intensity reflected from the mirror will quickly build up until radiation absorbed by the appropriate section of the body equals radiation emitted by that section. At that time, the intensity of radiation at that wavelength reflected from the mirror (and either emitted or reflected from the section of the body) would be the same as if the body had an emissivity of 1 at that wavelength. -
Ari Jokimäki at 01:36 AM on 29 February 2012New research from last week 8/2012
You can find some related papers to the boreal winter thing here. -
Tom Curtis at 01:24 AM on 29 February 2012Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
Eric (skeptic) @79, you surely are not taking data from one location on one small stream in a hilly (and hence well drained) area and extrapolating to globally averaged properties, are you? Because that would be cherry picking of exceptional proportions. -
YOGI at 01:23 AM on 29 February 2012Postma disproved the greenhouse effect
(-Snip-)Response:[DB] Again, you chose to "hang your hat" on the Postma paper you linked to. You were then challenged to defend a particularly egregious distortion of physics Postma makes, here. You cannot through dereliction run away from your defense of this paper, as it is your chosen field of play.
A failure to follow through on your self-assumed duty will have consequences.
Off-topic snipped.
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ShadedX at 01:22 AM on 29 February 2012It's the sun
Notice the somewhat recent topic on the rise of coronal mass ejections. Since the sun has loss heated mass, it has less to burn and therefore less heat -
Dikran Marsupial at 01:03 AM on 29 February 2012Postma disproved the greenhouse effect
Eric (skeptic) Radiative physics isn't really my area, but the definition of a blackbody is that it absorbs all radiation that falls on it, so if it rejects some particular frequency then by definition it isn't a blackbody. -
Composer99 at 00:33 AM on 29 February 2012Fritz Vahrenholt - Duped on Climate Change
IMO, elsa is simply incorrect to say that the addition of aerosol cooling "falsifies" the statement 'with rising CO2 the climate will warm'. In the historical period she notes, CO2 radiative forcing was still causing warming, even while solar and aerosol forcings were causing cooling. Even accepting elsa's simplification on its own terms for the sake of argument, I conclude it does not stand up to scrutiny. -
CBDunkerson at 00:31 AM on 29 February 20122nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
YOGI writes: "...but observations indicate a negative feedback." Which, of course, is complete nonsense. The net of observed feedbacks on greenhouse warming is clearly positive. No, peer review does not guarantee that something is true... but decades of peer reviewed research consistently finding the same result serve as a slightly better indicator than 'some story I just made up on the spot'.Response:[DB] You are very correct, CBD. Please note that Yogi has been tasked to defend an assertion he made earlier, which he then chose "hang his hat on" (see the response to his comment above to which you refer).
Until he follows through on that he will not be allowed to divert any other threads.
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JMurphy at 00:26 AM on 29 February 2012New research from last week 8/2012
CBDunkerson, the abstract for that paper is here, and a BBC report on it is here. -
Eric (skeptic) at 00:08 AM on 29 February 2012Postma disproved the greenhouse effect
Dikran, I like your explanation in #50, and with your indulgence I would like to ask one "alternate physics" question. If the mirror sends the same frequencies of IR that the blackbody emits back to the blackbody, is there any physical mechanism by which the blackbody could "reject" those frequencies?
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