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All IPCC definitions taken from Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis. Working Group I Contribution to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Annex I, Glossary, pp. 941-954. Cambridge University Press.

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Comments 62951 to 63000:

  1. Monckton Misrepresents Reality (Part 3)
    Tom Curtis @ 2, that is the Catch 22, isn't it? Scientists need to follow the scientific method in opposing the psuedo-science of people like Michaels and Monckton. Non-scientists like me could presumably take them on in civilian court action only if we could prove they are causing us harm through their actions and that would be a very slippery slope, as we non-scientists would have to rely on science to prove our case, but that is not the scientific way. The underlying problem is one of publicity, not science. Eliminating Michaels and Monckton would only result in some other sock-puppets taking their place. If only there was a Heartland equivalent working to promote truth and reality. Clever marketing is creating the political inertia and I suspect only clever marketing will be able to overcome the inertia. By the time Earth's climate is so badly dislocated that Mr. Average can understand what is happening, it will be too late.
  2. Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
    Tom Curtis: After seeing the curve again, I realized that in effect thermo-steric sea level rise slowed down after 2003. So after all,the ocean warmed less after 2004 than in 1992-2003 period? The slowdown in global warming during the last decade was real and not an ENSO + Solar driven (because of the big La Niñas + reduced solar activity in recent years) artifact?
  3. Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
    Doug H @26, as I said, "...the massive and wide spread flooding in 2010 resulted in a decrease in ocean mass, also adding to the reduced trend." But thank you for the graphic illustrating the point.
  4. Sceptical Wombat at 12:40 PM on 26 February 2012
    Monckton Misrepresents Reality (Part 3)
    The obvious question with the IPPC graph which shows that warming has been accelerating is to what extent it is dependent on start dates. It would be interesting to graph the rate of increase to 2005 from each year from 1856 to 1981.
  5. Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
    Tom Curtis @ 25, What impact on sea level have the following had over the last few years?
    1. Increased atmospheric water vapour, due to increased temperatures
    2. Increased precipitation over land, resulting from increased atmospheric water vapour
    Here is a jpg map of the Earth, showing how GRACE measured various places gaining water mass over a recent year. Would these have a measurable impact on sea levels?
  6. Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
    From Peru @24, your third chart shows a clear reduction in the rate of seal level rise due to the warming of the oceans in 2004 (steric sea level rise). As steric sea level represented more than half of the total contribution to sea level rise up to that point, the surprising thing is that the rate of sea level rise did not (approximately) halve at that time. Clearly an increase in ocean mass has partially countered a decrease in steric sea level rise. It should be noted that the massive and wide spread flooding in 2010 resulted in a decrease in ocean mass, also adding to the reduced trend.
  7. Global Extinction: Gradual Doom as Bad as Abrupt
    JP40 @ 33, you say
    "settlements in space could be the only way to preserve our civilization and our species"
    Even if our space settlements could survive the randomness of critical failures of equipment, or damage from the likes of meteorites and even if they had the capability to engineer replacement parts for failed equipment, I earnestly hope that they would not preserve our civilisation. After all, it is our civilised treatment of our home planet that is causing us to consider alternatives. I am saddened by the thought that all we have learned during our evolution may be lost, but I wonder whether knowledge has not been the poisoned fruit which now threatens us. If only we had never developed opposed thumbs, the world would still be Eden and humanity would be innocent of its crimes.
  8. Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
    One thing perplexes me: How can ocean mass sea level rise be accelerating (due to accelerating melt in Antartica and Greenland) while total sea level rise has not done the same thing? During 1993-2011, we have had a nearly constant rate of 3.2 mm/yr of SLR: Even worse, for 2003-2011 the linear trend dropped to 2.55 mm/yr: Source: AVISO One could think that steric sea level rise (a change in sea level caused by temperature and salinity changes)has slowed, balancing the ocean mass sea level rise acceleration, but that is not true: Source: NODC Where is the missing sea level rise?
  9. Radiative Balance, Feedback, and Runaway Warming
    Charlie A @21, I believe climate scientists use the term "net positive feedback" to mean that the feedback including the Stefan-Boltzmann radiation term is positive, ie, that the temperature response of the initial forcing plus the feedback is larger than the temperature response of the initial forcing alone.
  10. Positive feedback means runaway warming
    David Lewis @109, in that lecture, Hansen says,
    "Our model blows up before the oceans boil, but it suggests that perhaps runaway conditions could occur with added forcing as small as 10-20 W/m2."
    A 10 W/m^2 forcing, the lower limit of the range where a runaway greenhouse effect could be caused represents a 2.7 times doubling of CO2 concentration, or 1800 ppmv. To put that into perspective, the complete combustion of all currently known and speculated oil, gas and coal reserves would raise the CO2 concentration in the atmosphere to 1366 ppmv, or approx 8.5 W/m^2 forcing. Even where we foolish enough to do that, we could not realistically do it in a century, so there would be plenty of time to turn back from our folly. What concerns Hansen is the possible massive release of Methane from clathrates and from thawed tundra adding over 1000 ppmv of CO2 to the atmosphere; or if done quickly enough, acting as a direct forcing of much greater magnitude. Fortunately the probability of a methane release of that magnitude, or a rapid enough methane release to lift the forcing over the 10 W/m^2 level for the possibility of a runaway greenhouse effect is remote. I note that Hansen indicates that the run away effect is a "dead certainty" not only if we consume all coal, but also all tars (shale oil & tar sands). That indeed would lift CO2 concentrations above his lower limit for possibility, which together with a clathrate gun is would lift CO2 concentrations beyond the level where his model blows up. Again, however, this is not a prospect for this coming century because we cannot consume the coals fast enough on any likely economic scenario. More to the point, Hansen is simply wrong about this prospect, as is elegantly discussed by Chris Colose in his recent blog post on SkS. The upshot is, if we go for a suicide pact (burn all tars and coal), we can in fact make large portions of the planet literally uninhabitable by warm blooded creatures; but we cannot turn Earth into another Venus, or extinguish all life on Earth. (If nothing else, hypothermophiles will continue to hold on in geysers and ocean ridges. I'm sure that is a comforting thought.
  11. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    I will read the Trenberth guest post and comment later, thank you.
  12. Monckton Misrepresents Reality (Part 3)
    JoeTheScientist @2, No! And nor do we want to. Even on an issue so important, science works by the open exchange of ideas. Well, actually it works by the open and honest exchange of ideas, so what Monckton does is anti-science, but because of the way science works, it can only defend itself by the open exchange of ideas. As soon as scientists think they can rely on more than that, they kill that which they are trying to defend, as Lysenko did in the Soviet Union.
  13. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    Yogi 1338, If, hypothetically speaking, the source of heat on earth is internally generated, would you, in this case, agree that the earth will be warmer with water vapour present compared to the case without?
    Moderator Response: [JH] Please do not feed the troll.
  14. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    "[DB] You are advised to read the entire thread above, as your fallacy has been corrected several times already." Nutshell it for me now if you can, unless you can link me to the relevant comment, I`m not going to read all the comments for it.
    Response:

    [DB] If you cannot be bothered to read work already done, there for inspection, then why should anyone here engage you?  Perhaps if you succinctly narrow down your objection to the one thing you want to hang your hat on then someone here will be able to help you.

    Unless your goal is to simply waste the time of others.  As also has been evidenced on this thread.

  15. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    Response: [JH] Your propensisty to post factoids without context...... It was not out of context. I was commenting on the SOD link at #1333. And the data shows that daily min/max soil temp`s range less than the atmosphere.
    Moderator Response: [JH] You are skating on very thin ice. Please cease and desist.
  16. Satellites find over 500 billion tons of land ice melting worldwide every year, headlines focus on Himalayas
    Excuse my ignorance, what does,"the red spot in Africa is an artifact" mean and why do we have blue spot in the Pilbara region of WA,yes there is geological evidence of ice sheets at Marble Bar, but certainly not in the time these satellites have been recording data?
  17. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    #1336 "Are you warmer if you cover yourself in a blanket than you would be without the blanket? Yes of course you are, because the blanket back-radiates some of your body heat." Unlike the Earth I am internally heated so the analogy is not safe, but if the blanket is bright white, it could be handy to reflect the sunshine on a really hot day. But for an externally heated system such as Earth, to have 235W/m go in and out, but to reach 390 watts within the system is impossible: [link]
    Moderator Response:

    [DB] You are advised to read the entire thread above, as your fallacy has been corrected several times already.

    Additionally, you would be wise to read this guest post by Dr. Trenberth for yet further exposition into the subject.  It contains this updated version of the graphic you link:

    Click to enlarge

    [RH] Hotlinked url that was breaking page format.
  18. Global Extinction: Gradual Doom as Bad as Abrupt
    The technology needed for accomplishing a task isn't a guarantee to it getting done. We see this now with space travel exploration, but it also applies to climate change issues. Just because we know how to build wind turbines, solar plants, indoor airoponic farms, and sea barriers, doesn't mean we will be able to stop a collapse of civilization due to climate change and overpopulation related problems. The main problem in the western world, and especially America is the capitalist economy. A large corporation, as a collective entity of people pursuing their personal goals, has absolutely no intrest in reducing its profit margins, in the long term intrest of helping our civilization survive. That, and the fact that politics works a similar way, with politicians only concerned about getting reelected, Is the main reason why climate change denial is so wide-spread. In WW2, the government ordered car companies to start making tanks, jeeps, and aircraft. If a strong-willed president tried that today, with renewable energy, he/she would be called a commie and would get almost no support from congress. Technology is useless if the power behind the money needed to implement it won't act in the long-term best intrest of its people.
  19. Global Extinction: Gradual Doom as Bad as Abrupt
    Bernard J. - I agree with you that for humanity to survive on earth, and for the earth to survive, we need far fewer people living on it. But, I strongly dissagree with your dismissal of the possibility of colonizing space. The amount of energy required for moving people that far is mostly irrelevant, because there is no friction in space. After a spacecraft reaches its cruising speed, it doesn't need to fire its engines until it reaches its destination. As Robert Heinlein said "Get to low earth orbit and you're halfway to anywhere in the solar system." Most of the massive Saturn-5 rocket that sent the Apollo astronauts to the moon was just to get the rocket out of the atmosphere. We have the technology right now to colonize the moon and put a permanent outpost on Mars. It's only a matter of a government putting the 20-30 billion USD required into its space program. The only other issue is time. Using our current rocket technology, it takes 1-2 earth years to get to Mars. I liken it to the age of exploration in the 1500s. Where people decided to get on a boat and start a new life in the "new world." People then couldn't imagine that now we can cross the Atlantic in a few hours. With radiation protection, people could live their entire lives on Mars, or rotating space stations. Probably not on the moon, because of the affects of low gravity on people. Getting back to the topic, if human damage to the environment triggers the same chain of events as in the P-T extinction, settlements in space could be the only way to preserve our civilization and our species. As Carl Sagan said "All civilizations become either spacefaring or extinct."
  20. Radiative Balance, Feedback, and Runaway Warming
    @Saurj 16 - thanks for the expansion. For the purpose of ChrisC's review, maybe ppmv would work. @ChrisC - After three rounds of Moncton and the greatest extinction in the history of earth, explaining blackbody, sensitivity, and the temperature/gas dance with a few simple graphs ... is a grand slam. Maybe you could send this to the guys at The Big Bang Theory ... even Penny might get this one.
  21. Medieval Warm Period was warmer
    cjshaker, there's a nice 'hockey-stick' available at the first link you provided :
  22. Radiative Balance, Feedback, and Runaway Warming
    This is an areas where semantics and precise meanings DO matter. Many climate scientists use the term "net positive feedback" to mean that all second order feedbacks other than the Stefan-Boltzmann radiation term are positive. That is quite different than a true net positive feedback, where the positive feedbacks are larger than the negative feedback of ithe increase in radiation caused by the increase in temperature.
  23. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    #1333 S.O.D. article: "Notice that DLR does not drop significantly overnight. This is because of the heat capacity of the atmosphere – it cools down, but not as quickly as the ground." http://scienceofdoom.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/dlr-billings-ok-1993-2wks.png Thats bigger than some of the seasonal variation !
    Moderator Response: [JH] Your propensisty to post factoids without context is wearing very thin. It's like someone throwing gobs of paint against a wall and hoping that some will stick. At the end of the day, the wall is a complete mess. Please cease and desist.
  24. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    Yogi, Let me state this clearly. You are wrong and confused. You are religiously clinging to a misunderstanding of the science. You do not need Dikran or anyone else to walk you, step by painful step, through the thought process. What you need is to simply say to yourself "gee, maybe I don't understand all this, and I should open my mind, and go read and learn, and then come back when I have a better understanding of things." Trying to convince everyone else that you know better than all of science is a waste of everybody's time.
  25. Dikran Marsupial at 07:58 AM on 26 February 2012
    2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    YOGI Sorry, nobody can say I haven't been extreemly patient with you, but again you are playing word games. Nobody has said that back-radiation makes the surface warmer, just that it makes the surface warmer than it would otherwise be. Are you warmer if you cover yourself in a blanket than you would be without the blanket? Yes of course you are, because the blanket back-radiates some of your body heat. Likewise the back radiation from GHGs causes the earth to loose the heat it gains from absorbing visible and UV light from the sun more slowly by returning some of the out-bound IR back to the surface. I have had more than enough of this discussion; had you behaved better I would continue, but life is just too short.
  26. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    #1331 If I agree that the back-radiation from the water vapour causes the ground to be warmer than it would otherwise be, that is paramount to saying that it heats the ground. It does not and cannot, as it is colder than the ground, it merely slows the rate of cooling, not warms it.
  27. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    YOGI - you can verify some of this by actually comparing the measured backradiation in a desert compared to somewhere humid. Remember this is measurable properties here. Eg look at the SoD articles on DLR. In part one, you see the spectra for incoming versus outgoing. In part two, there is DLR measurements for Alice springs versus Billings OK. Read and understand.
  28. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    #1325 There are some absorption bands in the solar IR but plenty gets through. And IR penetrates into the surface of land like radio waves do. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Solar_Spectrum.png [Snipped]
  29. Dikran Marsupial at 07:39 AM on 26 February 2012
    2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    YOGI O.K. well lets revisit the original question, which was: "So what happens in a desert at night, does the CO2 back-radiation turn off when the sun goes down ?" We now know the answer, it isn't that the CO2 back-radiation turns off when the sun goes down, it cools more quickly because there is less back-radiation from water vapour because the atmosphere above the desert is drier. In fact the rapid cooling of the desert at night is a common example used to demonstrate the existence of back-radiation. Now your most recent post is essentially just blatant rhetorical evasion. If the back-radiation from water vapour causes the surface to "cool down slower", then at any point in time after nightfall it will be warmer than it would be if the water vapour were not there, precisely because of the difference in the rate of cooling. The reason why you want to evade admitting that the back-radiation causes the surface to be warmer than it would be if the water vapour were not there is obviously because you would then be forced to concede that the surface would be warmer than it would otherwise be if not for the back-radiation from CO2. Frankly getting to this point has been like getting blood out of a stone, and I can't see why you should think anyone will be willing to engage in a scientific discussion with you if you are going to behave in this manner. I am sorry to have to strongly suggest to everybody "DNFTT".
  30. Dikran Marsupial at 07:29 AM on 26 February 2012
    2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    Can I suggest we ignore YOGI's comment above until we have reached the end of the discussion about deserts. The errors in YOGI's post about solar IR are pretty obvious and begging for an answer, but it would be better if the answer were delayed for a while.
  31. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    #1327 No it causes it to cool down slower.
  32. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    #1325 Solar near IR is forty something % of the heat input from the Sun. You never heard of IR blocking windows ? its the solar thermal IR they are blocking, not DLR.
  33. Dikran Marsupial at 07:23 AM on 26 February 2012
    2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    YOGI I didn't say that it would warm the surface up, I said it would be warmer than it would if there were no water vapour in the atmosphere (and therefore no back-radiated IR). Do you agree that the back-radiated IR from the water vapour in the atmosphere would cause the surface to be warmer than it would be if the water vapour were not there?
  34. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    No, it just reduces the rate of cooling, it cant warm it up.
  35. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    "Insulation, it cant warm the ground though unless its warmer than the ground." The "insulation" effect is radiative. A quick look at the thermal properties of moist air (conductivity, heat capacity) cf dry air, would tell you that conductive insulation isnt at work. Do the math. As to your "greenhouse". Incoming radiation from sun isnt in IR range (that is whole point) so no, it would heat up slower. If you have really read the SoD articles explaining the science here, you are showing little evidence of it.
  36. Radiative Balance, Feedback, and Runaway Warming
    corrected- thanks
  37. Radiative Balance, Feedback, and Runaway Warming
    Very clear explanation, and excellent graphs, thanks. One quibble: From these figures, we can readily see the fallacy is "positive feedbacks imply instability" type arguments. ... should read "the fallacy in"
  38. Dikran Marsupial at 07:07 AM on 26 February 2012
    2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    YOGI O.K., so you agree that the water vapour re-radiates some IR photons back to the surface. Would you agree that these back-radiated IR photons cause the surface to be warmer than it would be if those molecules of water vapour were not there?
  39. Tropical Thermostats and Global Warming
    As I understand the question, there is really a kind of thermostat (figure 1 from Argo is clear, and most of the warmer T probably come from the 30°S-30°N zone, so the rapid fall beyond 28-30 °C is probably not an artifact as suggested by Jeff on #6). But nothing says in the theory and the observations that the maximum value of this thermostat is constant when the climate is forced (or when it is different from now): we could have a future thermostat treshold at 32, 33, 34... °C, as we had past SSTs (and thermostat maximum values) hotter than now. Chris #12 : isn't Lindzen's "Iris Effect" a kind of tropical thermostat (less cirriform clouds > more IR radiation escaping to space)? If so, it took less than 20 years, the seminal paper about Iris is rather published in 2001.
  40. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    #1322 ok there may an exchange but it cant get cool off in the direction of the warmer body, as the warmer body is warming it faster than it can cool off.
  41. Dikran Marsupial at 06:58 AM on 26 February 2012
    2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    YOGI wrote "It will want to radiate it towards somewhere colder." O.K. so when a molecule of water vapour in the atmosphere emits a photon of IR, how does it know not to emit it in the direction of a warmer body?
  42. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    Dikran Marsupial "O.K. so the water vapour absorbs the IR radiated from the ground and then warms up. What happens to the heat energy that the water vapour has acquired in this way?" It will want to radiate it towards somewhere colder. But while it is warmer, it will mean the ground will lose heat slower, remember my cup of tea ? ~ insulation. "insulators do not work by reducing the rate at which something radiates photons of IR" Paint your roof white and it will do exactly that.
  43. Dikran Marsupial at 06:50 AM on 26 February 2012
    2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    IanC can I suggest we leave YOGIs greenhouse until we get to the conclusion of the discussion of why the desert cools rapidly at night. We won't make any progress in this discussion if it keeps branching out onto new thought experiments before the earlier ones have been resolved.
  44. JoeTheScientist at 06:48 AM on 26 February 2012
    Monckton Misrepresents Reality (Part 3)
    Can't we start arresting some of these frauds for, well, fraud??
  45. Search For 'Missing Heat' Confirms More Global Warming 'In The Pipeline'
    Ok, I'm going to try one more time, then I'm out. Like I've said, you have a point about aerosols, but you are wrong on carbon-induced warming. I think I can identify the source of confusion. There is a difference between "past emissions" and a "constant composition atmosphere". The fully-coupled models used for IPCC AR4 were only 'physical' models. They did not contain carbon-cycles, so carbon could not be advected around or exchanged between natural reservoirs. Instead, atmospheric CO2 concentrations are specified in this class of models. Common scenario's included an instant doubling of CO2, or a 1% increase in CO2 per year. Ok, now lets consider what happening is these model results, which we are familiar with. In the scenario where CO2 is increased, and lets say set to 450 ppm - the surface temperature takes hundreds, or thousands of years to come into equilibrium (this here is your "warming in the pipeline"). Even if CO2 is increased slowly at say 1% per year, rather than instantly, it takes hundreds of years for equilibrium to be reached (because of the slow-adjustment of the ocean some people here have talked about). However, the key to realize is that in order to maintain an atmospheric CO2 of 450 ppm, you need a constant source of emissions. If there were no emissions, the ocean would take up carbon, and the atmospheric CO2 would drop below 450 ppm. However the AR4 models could not diagnose what emissions were consistent with keeping CO2 at 450 ppm, since they did not contain carbon cycles. The set of intermediate complexity earth system models (such as UVic, Bern, Climber) do contain carbon cycles, and could diagnose the emissions consistent with keeping CO2 at 450 ppm. Also, the new generation of fully coupled models being used currently in CMIP5 / AR5 are earth system models (or carbon-climate models), that are capable of tracking carbon through the system. So, for a constant composition atmosphere, surface temperatures take hundreds of year to come into equilibrium (but, keeping CO2 constant also requires some ongoing emissions). For zero emissions, (or the commitment to past emissions), there is no future warming, as explained previously. @Rob 45 That makes no sense at all. How can the ocean warm without eventually exchanging that heat to the atmosphere? Don't get confused between heat and temperature!! The ocean can absorb a massive amount of heat, but the average temperature of the ocean (and particulalrly the deep ocean) will remain below the temperature of the surface! Thus the direction of the heat flux remains downward!
  46. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    IanC#1318 So from the IR intensity Earth looks a lot colder from 20km up than it really is on the surface. Did you like my greenhouse in #1307 ?
  47. Medieval Warm Period was warmer
    Chris, in what way do you think Cook & Palmer challenges consensus? (I mean its used in the Mann/Jones 2003,2004 papers). Also did you follow up and look at their 2006 paper. Of course, MCA/MWP is example of natural variability. But not of unforced variability. Instead of cherry picking particular proxies, tell what is wrong with the methodology of the Mann 2009 paper which integrates them all for a global picture.
  48. Radiative Balance, Feedback, and Runaway Warming
    sauerj- I wouldn't have thought that the article was that exciting, but glad I could help! I didn't show graphs with different CO2 concentrations because you'd barely see the difference between what I did, and say, an 800 ppm experiment. Keep in mind that the forcing for 2xCO2 is something like 4 W/m2 and I'm plotting the y-axis on these graphs over a range of many hundreds of W/m2, so it won't show up well unless you go to CO2 levels much higher than we're really worried about for future global warming. And it turns out that the OLR threshold at which it start to level off and become independent of temperature doesn't depend too strongly on the CO2 concentration.
  49. 2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    YOGI 1302, Our discussion up to post 1290 is related to the figures in the article. If you read the caption that came with the figure, you'll notice that 265K, instead of 287K, will be the more sensible surface temperature. "The closer you get to the surface the less absorption there is from the 600-750 band, and the majority of the effect is above 3km." No. Absorption increases with density. Since the density is the greatest near the surface, the absorption is the greatest there too.
  50. Dikran Marsupial at 06:24 AM on 26 February 2012
    2nd law of thermodynamics contradicts greenhouse theory
    YOGI O.K. so the water vapour absorbs the IR radiated from the ground and then warms up. What happens to the heat energy that the water vapour has acquired in this way? n.b. insulators do not work by reducing the rate at which something radiates photons of IR (that depends on its temperature)

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