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Comments 114251 to 114300:

  1. Doug Bostrom at 07:07 AM on 27 July 2010
    It's waste heat
    RSVP, imagine that as cars from the rock concert move down the congested highway the mayor of the local city connected to the highway announces that an asteroid is approaching and will strike the center of the city within hours. Many residents respond to the announcement by "getting out of Dodge," ironically jumping into their Dodge automobiles and hightailing it for the proverbial hills. Proportioning the public panic to the relative numbers of AHF forcing versus forcing by a doubling of C02, the highway must then cope with not only the increase of traffic from the concert but a panic stricken flood of drivers representing over 100 times more additional vehicles beyond that created by the concert traffic. Not to put too fine a point on it, you're obsessing over a very tiny number.
  2. The nature of authority
    Actually, I don't know that. It sure seems like that's the impression you're trying to convey in this thread. If not, you might want to try to write more clearly. In particular, using repeated expressions like "According to AGW" and "I am being told that ..." when referring to the basic physics of infrared spectroscopy does not convey the impression of confidence in said spectroscopy. Most people, when writing about something they genuinely believe in, don't feel the need to add a continual stream of parenthetical qualifiers.
  3. It's waste heat
    An metaphore to "queue threoy" may help you all... There is a highway that goes into the city. The flow is constant everyday (no weekends in this theoretical land). The flow of cars depends on the amount of traffic since the channel (the highway) but in generally is usually constant and flows well. One day Road Maintenance needs to paint the lines on the side of the highway and places cones on the right lane. This slows traffic down slightly. (This might be effects of elevated CO2... perhaps). On top of this however, there is a special event that day (rock concert) and the number of cars increases, but only by 1%. (waste heat) Since the flow was basically optimal before these two occurrences came about, the traffic almost comes to a complete halt. There is now a traffic jam and cars are moving bumper to bumber. Someone in a car wants to see a huge accident to justify this inconvenience. As he passes the cones, he is dissappointed that there is nothing dramatic to see. (AGW guy, asking me for numbers to justify the effects of man made waste heat).
  4. It's waste heat
    Here's another summary on this topic, with some references: Global Warming Waste Heat
  5. It's waste heat
    In the medium concentrations we have for GHG's in Earth's atmosphere, a doubling of CO2 concentration increases the width of the blocked LWIR band enough that the Earth's surface must be 1oC hotter for the integrated spectrum at the top of the atmosphere to sum to the energy coming in. Increased GHG concentrations slow the escape of the LWIR energy from the atmosphere. The 10^9 collisions/second ensure that the GHG's maintain the same temperature as the rest of the air mass - you can't separate N2 and O2 temps from the air mass as a whole, and it's rather silly to claim so. Back to the point of the thread - Human energy use releases energy at a rate 2 orders of magnitude less than the GHG entrapment. Unless you provide some evidence to the contrary, which you have not done so far, waste heat is not an issue worth worrying about.
  6. The nature of authority
    Ned "In another thread RSVP is questioning basic laboratory measurements of the spectral properties of gases that have been known since the 1850s" That is not what I am doing and you know that.
  7. It's waste heat
    Maybe this will help. RSVP, think of each individual CO2 molecule as a tiny machine, taking in fuel (IR radiation) and giving off waste heat (vibrational energy transferred by collisions with other molecules in the atmosphere). Every year, we add billions of tons of those tiny machines to the atmosphere. The waste heat they produce is two orders of magnitude greater than the heat from our clunky mechanical devices down here on the surface. Does that help?
  8. It's waste heat
    The concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere affects the absorptance of longwave IR. It doesn't particularly affect the rate at which the energy from that absorption is shared with the rest of the atmosphere. Those are two entirely different processes. You really don't understand how this works, do you?
  9. It's waste heat
    Ned "Likewise, most of the heat from GHG absorption will also be transferred to O2 and N2 molecules, thanks to the fact that each CO2 molecule collides with N2 or O2 molecules roughly one billion times per second. " Why does GHG concentration matter? Does it go to two billion times per second as concentration doubles? My point is you make it sound like all the energy captured by CO2 goes directly into the surrounding molecules (one minute), but concentration "modulates" this process another minute when it comes to justifying the reduction of GHG emissions.
  10. It's waste heat
    Ned "I'm confused by all the references to N2 and O2. Why do you think there's some kind of distinction there? " What makes a GHG a GHG? N2 and O2 are not greenhouse gasses by definition, otherwise the atmosphere would be 100% GHG and there would be no problem with emission of GHGs. How can you ask this question?
  11. It's waste heat
    KR "The air mass as a whole, containing GHG's, is not transparent to IR - it heats and cools depending on the IR in/out balance. What exactly is not clear about that?!?" The crux of the AGW theory (and the campaign to control GHGs concentrations) rests on the assumption that the efficiency of "The air mass as a whole" to "emit/absorb IR" is a function of concentration. Making this kind of a blank statement about how air gets rid of heat ignores the premises upon which AGW is based on.
  12. It's waste heat
    RSVP, the point that Doug and KR and I keep emphasizing is the main one -- you need to provide some evidence here. But aside from that, I admit I'm confused by all the references to N2 and O2. Why do you think there's some kind of distinction there? Most of the waste heat from anthropogenic sources will be carried in the atmosphere by O2 and N2. Likewise, most of the heat from GHG absorption will also be transferred to O2 and N2 molecules, thanks to the fact that each CO2 molecule collides with N2 or O2 molecules roughly one billion times per second. Perhaps you're under some misimpression that when a greenhouse gas absorbs IR radiation it only raises the temperature of the GHG molecules themselves? If so, that's wrong. The atmosphere is not a mix of gases each with its own distinct temperature.
  13. It's waste heat
    N2 and O2 are transparent to IR. However, the CO2 and H2O content of the air mass can and does absorb and emit IR. GHG's at air temperature will lose/gain energy as they emit/absorb IR, and through molecular collisions will cool/heat the air mass as a whole, including the N2 and O2. And that thermal exchange is very efficient, very fast. The air mass as a whole, containing GHG's, is not transparent to IR - it heats and cools depending on the IR in/out balance. What exactly is not clear about that?!? I've got nothing more to say here, unless RSVP comes up with a measurement supported number comparable to Flanner's.
  14. Doug Bostrom at 04:52 AM on 27 July 2010
    It's waste heat
    I think we can conclude that this is a dead end, unless RSVP can produce a number for "AHF" more useful and much larger than Flanner's.
  15. It's waste heat
    N2 and O2 are transparent to IR. These gases do not radiate since they are not GHGs, and therefore have a hard time loosing their heat outside of convective cooling with water and ice. The cooling of manmade heat engines raises the temperature of N2 and O2 directly. This heat is carried around the planet and is being discharged and dissipated in the cooler regions since convection requires a lower temperature for heat to be transferred.
  16. It's waste heat
    RSVP, you could simplify this whole process a lot if you would just point us to a paper, a study, or anything, really, that quantitatively shows waste heat being equal to or greater than radiative forcing from GHGs. Once we have such a source, we can debate the data, methods, interpretations, etc. But until you give us something that at least remotely resembles a shred of evidence, what's the point?
  17. Doug Bostrom at 04:39 AM on 27 July 2010
    It's waste heat
    RSVP, I'm (honestly) still uncertain about what point you're making. I -think- you're saying that observed increases in global temperature are significantly affected by anthropogenic liberation of heat energy. If that's the case, your argument is stuck here Nearly all energy used for human purposes is dissipated as heat within Earth's land–atmosphere system. Thermal energy released from non-renewable sources is therefore a climate forcing term. Averaged globally, this forcing is only +0.028 W m−2... until you can provide a substitute number for Flanner's calculated result that is both much larger and more correct. If you're driving at something else, different matter of course.
  18. It's waste heat
    CBDunkerson I have tried to answer your questions. It would seem fair that you try to answer some of mine. 1. Can energy be destroyed? 2. Where exactly does the Urban Heat go? 3. What does the word energy dissipation mean to you in this context? 4. What are the radiative properties for cooling of N2 and O2? 5. How do these properties differ from GHGs?
  19. Doug Bostrom at 04:23 AM on 27 July 2010
    September 2010 Arctic Ice Extent Handicapping Via ARCUS
    Those still following this topic may be interested to read a very informative post by Dirk Notz, here at RealClimate. For me it was interesting to see my intuition seconded by somebody with some expertise: Because of the very low thickness of much of the Arctic sea ice, it wasn’t too surprising that at the end of the winter, sea-ice extent decreased rapidly. This rapid loss lead up to the lowest June sea-ice extent since the beginning of reliable observations. After this rapid loss of the very thin ice that had formed late in winter, the retreat slowed down substantially but the ice extent remained well below the long-term mean. Currently, the ice covers an area that is slightly larger than the extent in late July of the record year 2007. However, this does not really allow for any reliable projections regarding the future evolution of Arctic sea ice in the weeks to come. The reason for this is mostly that sea ice in the Arctic has become very thin. Hence, in contrast to the much thicker ice of past decades, the ice now reacts very quickly and very sensitively to the weather patterns that are predominant during a certain summer. This currently limits the predictability of sea-ice extent significantly. For example, in 2007 a relatively stable high-pressure system formed above the Beaufort sea, towards the north of North America, leading to rapid melting of sea ice there. If again such stable high pressure system forms in the Arctic throughout the coming weeks, we might well experience a sea-ice minimum that is below the record minimum as observed in 2007. However, if the summer should turn out to be colder than during the previous years, a sea-ice minimum similar to that observed in 2009 would not be too surprising. Hence, at the moment all that remains is to wait – and to check again and again the latest data of Arctic sea-ice extent. Emphasis mine. Probably what many of us suspected.
  20. The nature of authority
    Thingodonta:
    Good quote from Charles Darwin.
    I chose that quote because it was Darwin's formulation of the Dunning-Kruger Effect, 128 years before it was named.
  21. It's waste heat
    Previous comment, last sentence - that should be *provided*, not *proved*; I believe that makes more sense. ...must...practice...typing...
  22. It's waste heat
    RSVP #26 1: Your answer makes no sense. Heat spreading through atmospheric Nitrogen and Oxygen does not explain why the poles are heating faster... there is not more Nitrogen and Oxygen there. 2: Your answer is clearly false. Yes, the Urban Heat Island effect (which has very little to do with waste heat) causes cities to be warmer (though nowhere near enough so to explain the GLOBAL temperature increase), but it does not result in warming of the rural areas around these urban centers as we would expect if global warming were simply the spreading out of heat from urban sources. Hence the 'island' part of the name... it is a sharply localized effect. 3: Again, your answer makes no sense. How are atmospheric Nitrogen and Oxygen responsible for a decrease in the rate of heat escape? Especially as they have not themselves changed significantly? As to 'more heating oil in Winter'... I thought you had claimed that measured warming was due to ACCUMULATED waste heat because it is magically prevented from escaping the atmosphere. Thus, when the heating oil was burned is irrelevant... the heat should still be there in the Summer. 4: Here you seem to simply deny the data.
  23. Assessing global surface temperature reconstructions
    Berényi Péter writes: It is not as simple as that. The effect of adjustments on overall GHCN trend may be negligible relative to the raw dataset, but it is not so with USHCN which is a subset of it. Even if that were the case, the US represents approximately 2% of the surface area of the Earth. There is no way that the USHCN adjustment process is going to have a detectable influence on the global temperature record. As Figure 5 shows, at the global scale you get virtually no difference using raw or adjusted data. BP continues: This difference in adjustments for the US vs. the rest of the world either does not make any sense from a scientific point of view or it has such a subtle explanation, that it has escaped all the wise people attending to this blog. Peterson & Vose 1997 make it clear that different adjustment processes are used for USHCN and non-USHCN stations. The NCDC website FAQ explains that NOAA has detailed station history information for USHCN stations that it does not have for non-USHCN stations. BP continues: An even more serious question is why to waste time and effort to adjustments that have no substantial effect whatsoever on a global scale? Maybe because they want to make individual station records as accurate as possible for local to regional-scale studies, even if those corrections largely get lost in the noise when averaging data globally? Or maybe nobody could be certain there would be no effect at the global scale until actually trying it? Or maybe there's some other explanation.
  24. Models are unreliable
    Pete Ridley - I'm still interested in your response to my question on evaluating Hansen 1988 as a scientific model. I believe this is critical to the thread and the discussion.
  25. It's waste heat
    RSVP - I see no no numbers in your latest post, no evidence. All you present are "it seems like it should..." statements contradictory to what we observe. The numbers, the measured values, and the physics all say you are incorrect about the importance of waste heat. A hypothesis must be congruent with the evidence. If a hypothesis is contradicted by all the evidence, it's time for a new hypothesis. Waste heat driving global warming just doesn't make sense, RSVP. And you have proved exactly zero evidence to support that hypothesis.
  26. Peter Hogarth at 02:55 AM on 27 July 2010
    Assessing global surface temperature reconstructions
    Ned at 02:04 AM on 27 July, 2010 Thanks, that is indeed a clearer way of visualising the increase. I also forgot to mention I had offset the GISS data in an attempt at clarity.
  27. Peter Hogarth at 02:51 AM on 27 July 2010
    Assessing global surface temperature reconstructions
    Robert Way at 23:14 PM on 26 July, 2010 "ocean trends in the last couple years have not been exceedingly positive" I suspect that was written in haste...? Thermal expansion of oceans in recent years: We have to be careful here. Cazenave 2009 was writing just after the altimeter data was showing a temporary dip in rate of MSL rise, there is something of an update in Cazenave 2010 where the recent estimate of reduction in the thermal expansion component of MSL is put into the context of other previous natural variations (see for example figure 7 in that paper) which look similar and the altimeter trend reverting back to the pre-2007 rate after 2008 (yet table 1 is a repeat of the 2009 one with data up to 2007). This is discussed briefly. There is also new (2010) evidence from Grace on increased land storage of water in Llovel 2010 This first estimate based on measurement of Land storage trend contribution to mean sea level trend is slightly negative, giving -0.22 +/-0.05 mm/year. We then have factors like the 2010 reprocessing of the entire DUACS altimeter data set, though this seems to have reduced variability in global MSL terms (no real difference in estimates of MSL rise rate) it has resulted in some significant (>1mm/yr) localised differences (corrections!) between old and new datasets.
  28. Berényi Péter at 02:50 AM on 27 July 2010
    Assessing global surface temperature reconstructions
    #38 Ned at 00:01 AM on 27 July, 2010 Likewise, there are a lot of people out there who think that the GHCN adjustment process is the cause of the observed warming, and that this warming would disappear if one just went back to the "raw" data. Thus, showing that the warming signal is present in almost identical form in the raw and adjusted data helps dispel that claim. It is not as simple as that. The effect of adjustments on overall GHCN trend may be negligible relative to the raw dataset, but it is not so with USHCN which is a subset of it. On this subset 80% of warming during the lats nine decades is created by adjustments. Also, the statistics of adjustments is entirely different on this subset. This difference in adjustments for the US vs. the rest of the world either does not make any sense from a scientific point of view or it has such a subtle explanation, that it has escaped all the wise people attending to this blog. You can look up the details here and here. An even more serious question is why to waste time and effort to adjustments that have no substantial effect whatsoever on a global scale? It is also shown, that there is not much difference between "rural" and "urban" trends. But no one has explained yet why the far reaching consequences of this observation are ignored.
  29. It's waste heat
    CBDunkerson #22 "1: Why are temperature increases most pronounced at the poles... where there is virtually no industry generating waste heat? ------------------------------ This gets back to the issue of how N2 and O2 dissipate heat. Not by radiation. Since energy cant be destroyed, it must be spreading itself everywhere. 2: Why do we not see huge spikes of increased heat around urban industrial centers gradually leveling off as you get further into non-industrial regions? ---------------------------- answer to 2.: We do. See links. http://www.epa.gov/heatisld/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urban_heat_island http://www.concretethinker.com/Content/ImageLib/lblgraph.jpg 3: Why has warming been most pronounced at night and during Winter? That makes sense if the warming is due to decreases in the rate heat escapes... but not if it is due to increasing 'accumulated heat'. --------------------------- The idea that N2 and O2 are not good emitters of IR agrees with your statement about "decrease in the rate heat escapes". The difference here is in what we assume is causing this. In addition, for a fixed quantity of man-made heat, the lower the temperature, the higher the percentage this represents quantitatively relative to the ambient energy level, and convective heat transfer is in proportion to the difference in temperature. So this also can be applied to answering in part question 1. And I dont know about you, but I personally use more heating oil in the Winter. 4: Why is the stratosphere cooling? Again, that makes sense if heat is being prevented from escaping to the stratosphere... but not if the total heat of the planetary environment is increasing." ----------------------------- Is it really cooling? Obviously this is not based on tree ring data. ;)
  30. It's waste heat
    Yes, CBD, I think that's a useful approach for many topics here. In this case, though, RSVP hasn't offered any empirical evidence in support of his claims for waste heat. Well, I'm a skeptic. I want to see some evidence before I concede that it's even worth discussing.
  31. It's waste heat
    Ned, many deniers assume that all data which contradicts their beliefs has been faked. Thus it may help to present proofs based on basic logic in addition to those based on data. Or not. Some are impervious to both.
  32. Assessing global surface temperature reconstructions
    Albatross -- thanks! Peter Hogarth: Here's another way of visualizing this: The gray line is RSS (satellite) monthly temperatures through 2000. The pink trendline is the linear trend 1979-2000. Note that, for the past decade, temperatures have mostly been above the pre-2001 trend. In fact, about 2/3 of the months have been above the trend line, including 10 of the past 12. The one exception was the 2008 La Nina.
  33. Berényi Péter at 02:02 AM on 27 July 2010
    The nature of authority
    #133 dcwarrior at 23:57 PM on 26 July, 2010 Perhaps it's time for guest posters from the world of politics, PR or public opinion to give advice on how to turn the tide? No way, man. It is supposed to be a science blog, not a political one. Neither it is a PR device. Read the Comments Policy please. More than one of my comments even slightly touching on political issues got deleted. And I truly wish all such comments have the same fate, even if they came from the other side. In this respect moderation policy is not perfect yet, as there are also posts which have a clearcut political edge, still, they get published here. But it is a shortcoming, not a strength. If you want to turn the tide with such devices, all the authenticity earned so far is thrown into the wind.
  34. The nature of authority
    BP writes: You don't even need a laboratory thermal radiometer to see this. Well, you need either a radiometer or a mathematical model to quantify it. Since he was voicing disbelief in the model, I suggested the radiometer. I do like your visualization though.
  35. Assessing global surface temperature reconstructions
    Excellent synthesis Ned. Thanks for taking the time and for making the effort. What you have here is a comprehensive summary of the pertinent facts about the global SAT record. I'm not surprised that those in denial about AGW are going to try and dismiss it out of hand-- the data presents a very robust (an inconvenient) picture of warming. Peter @40, you beat me to it :)
  36. Berényi Péter at 01:32 AM on 27 July 2010
    The nature of authority
    #129 AWoL at 10:11 AM on 26 July, 2010 Stefan-Boltzmann says that a squ mtr of material of typical emissivity of 90-95%,at 27degC will beam out something of the order of 459 watts Yes, something like that. A perfect blackbody (e.g. a hole leading to a large cavity) would indeed radiate 459.3 W/m2 at 300 K. This 300 K is only 26.85°C, not 27°C, but that's not a big deal. And the hole's emissivity is 100%, not 90-95%. A material of 90% emissivity would radiate 414 W/m2 at 27°C. You don't even need a laboratory thermal radiometer to see this. Just imagine a ball of 56.4 cm diameter (surface area 1 m2) filled with 27°C water and left in interstellar space (temperature 2.725 K, that is less than -270°C). If you want to keep its temperature unchanged, it is entirely reasonable that more than 400 W continuous power is needed for heating. Or if interstellar space is too far for you, hang the ball in a large space filled with 0°C thermal radiation. You can apply a thin rope to a branch in a dry winter night with low clouds and temperature around freezing. The background radiation in such an environment is 315.7 W/m2 (it is 3.1 μW/m2 in interstellar space). In this case, if the emissivity/absorptivity of the ball is 90%, you only need 130 W to keep it at 27°C. Of course you'd need a bit more, because now it is surrounded by (dry) air and it also cools the ball, but heat conductivity of air is low, so in calm weather most of the losses are radiative. If it is still not personal enough, try to calculate how much do you have to eat to stay alive in such an environment naked. The surface of adult human body is about 2 m2, skin's emissivity is close to 100% and you should not let your skin temperature go too low, otherwise it dies (gets black and peels off your flesh). Tibetan monks do something like that. It is called tumo and it keeps the body warm in extreme cold. But even they need plenty of tea with yak butter to resupply the energy lost. Fat has 37 kJ/g, therefore 40-50 g butter can supply more than enough heat for an hour for a well trained body. Of course if there is also a chilly wind, more energy is needed, because a lot more air gets into contact with skin, and even if it has low specific heat and low heat conductivity, contact losses can exceed radiative ones.
  37. Peter Hogarth at 01:10 AM on 27 July 2010
    Assessing global surface temperature reconstructions
    Ken Lambert at 23:17 PM on 26 July, 2010 "What is of interest is that there has been a flattening of temperatures since 1998 in all the reconstructions, and overall, the satellite reconstructions since 1975 show less warming than the GHCN charts." I am highly skeptical of this conclusion. I have added the gradients for all three in degrees/year. Now ignoring the fact you cherry pick 1998 which is an obvious peak el Nino year, and the publicly available satellite data goes back to 1978 and not 1975, and the RSS satellite data has indistinguishable gradient from GISS and other land/ocean based datasets since 1978, and the 20 year gradient since 1990 has increased over the thirty year gradient in all data sets, I ask what flattening? or less warming? I could also have added the various independent radiosonde datasets, eg gradient 0.0193 for HadAT since 1990, but no surprises here either.
  38. It's waste heat
    CBDunkerson, those are all interesting questions. For me, though, they're secondary. Being a skeptic by nature, I'd like to see some evidence from RSVP, in the form of a paper or a study or some actual data. Until something like that is presented, why should anyone care about waste heat? Flanner 2009 calculates that it's minuscule, and RSVP hasn't given us any references to contradict that.
  39. It's waste heat
    RSVP wrote: "I personally dont think humans are better off changing the chemistry of their atmosphere." Sooo... you agree that we shouldn't be emitting all that CO2. Excellent. That said, a few things which need explaining if you want to continue running with this 'global temperature increases are being caused by waste heat' bit; 1: Why are temperature increases most pronounced at the poles... where there is virtually no industry generating waste heat? 2: Why do we not see huge spikes of increased heat around urban industrial centers gradually leveling off as you get further into non-industrial regions? 3: Why has warming been most pronounced at night and during Winter? That makes sense if the warming is due to decreases in the rate heat escapes... but not if it is due to increasing 'accumulated heat'. 4: Why is the stratosphere cooling? Again, that makes sense if heat is being prevented from escaping to the stratosphere... but not if the total heat of the planetary environment is increasing. Those are just a start. There are dozens of other things which clearly indicate that 'waste heat' is not the cause... even setting aside issues of scale.
  40. It's waste heat
    RSVP - yep, a glowing fog is all you would see from a satellite at GHG wavelengths. You need to choose a different wavelength (visible, for example) to resolve ground objects. You still have not addressed the base issue of this thread, however. That is the fact that all industrial energy production (waste heat, used energy that eventually becomes heat via entropy, etc.) sums up to a number 2 orders of magnitude smaller than the GHG entrapment of solar energy. If we were to convert all energy production to solar power, with a decrease in Earth albedo, the 1-2% forcing gain in albedo and solar panel waste heat inefficiencies would be more than balanced by the 99% decrease from GHG entrapment. See the RealClimate estimates of energy balance from solar replacement of fossil fuels.
  41. It's waste heat
    RSVP, it would help if you would please give us a reference to a paper or a study that shows that the magnitude of the forcing from waste heat has been dramatically underestimated and that it's comparable to the 2.5 W/m2 from greenhouse gases.
  42. It's waste heat
    RSVP writes: The bulk of the atmosphere is N2 and O2. Most of the heat radiating off of the Earth goes up and out, otherwise we would have temperatures like the hot sidewalk midday. And the heat that goes "up and out" is not included in the stated radiative forcing for CO2. Thus, we can directly compare the radiative forcing from CO2 to the waste heat forcing. As has been pointed out over and over again, the latter is two orders of magnitude smaller than the former.
  43. Models are unreliable
    Pete Ridley, I am not a "supporter of The (significant human-made global climate change) Hypothesis" (although I don't know how to react to that rather convoluted and bizarre term - doesn't Anthropogenic Global Warming [AGW] do it for you ?) : I am an accepter of the scientific facts behind AGW. Until I see such facts over-turned, or a better theory come along, I will stick with the AGW one.
  44. Models are unreliable
    Steady on, Pete. You claim there are inconsistencies and inadequacies in the models and argument of "proponents" of AGW. I'd suggest that if you want to maintain consistency with your claim to be a "sceptic" that you avoid expressions like - 'the first UK whitewash hearing'. That seriously undercuts the position you claim to advance.
  45. It's waste heat
    KR "The only way that energy leaves/cooling occurs via LWR is if the sum of emission events is higher than the sum of absorption events " I assume you are talking about diffusion at some atmospheric boundary layer. However if I was passing overhead on a satellite pointing my IR detector towards the ground, I assume I would "see" IR energy as long as it was "brighter" than this intermediate IR "cloud". In other words, the GHG issue you are talking about is real but subtile, not unlike being able to see fog lights through daytime fog. The point being that if the ground is hot enough, the IR energy will make its way out.
  46. Peter Hogarth at 00:17 AM on 27 July 2010
    Watts Up With That concludes Greenland is not melting without looking at any actual ice mass data
    Berényi Péter at 20:43 PM on 26 July, 2010 Please read the papers rather than jumping in. They cover both your points. Your solution is not most likely. The "missing" heat is not really missing as such but less than the current estimates of uncertainty in factors like TOA radiation. The deep ocean estimates reduce that uncertainty, but as the estimates vary between 5 and up to 20% on recent work we have a way to go before uncertainty is reduced to the point of unambiguous budget balance. In terms of the 0.4W/m2 "missing" I have seen quoted on this thread I note from Palmer 2010 that the interannual variability in net radiation has been estimated as ± 0.7 W m-2 from Wong 2006 whilst Lyman and Johnson 2008 estimated the 2006 Argo coverage in situ sampling uncertainty for the 0-700m layer is approximately ± 0.4 Wm-2 over multi-year time scales at the 95% level, whilst Lyman 2010 slightly increases the estimate of Ocean heating to 0.64 ± 0.11 Wm-2 over the 16 year record at 90% confidence level, and Kawano 2010 may add 5 to 7 % to this. As uncertainties are reduced and estimates revised, we would expect any gaps in error budgets to close. I will be looking at a post on Deep Ocean Heat Content (it will take some time to review the papers). I will also look at any more recent work on net radiation and uncertainties here (I am aware of a few very recent papers).
  47. Assessing global surface temperature reconstructions
    Robert Way, I agree that there's room for some mildly interesting science on the UHI question. I don't think it will turn out to be zero (that would be surprising) but I don't think it will account for more than a small fraction of the observed warming. We know that over the past three decades the oceans have warmed (obviously not due to UHI) and AFAIK every model suggests that the land should be warming faster than the ocean. Those two facts, plus the fact that land is only 29% of the surface, suggest that UHI's impact on the global mean must be fairly small. I think the more interesting science will be on the question of why the tropospheric amplification is not really showing up. If you ignore the land entirely, and just look over the oceans, the lower troposphere should be warming about 1.4X the rate of the surface. We have satellite measurements of sea surface temperature and of lower troposphere temperature. The LT trend is pretty much the same as the SST trend, not 1.4X higher. Both data sets come from satellites. How will this be resolved?
  48. Models are unreliable
    Jmurphy, you do what supporters of The (significant human-made global climate change) Hypothesis often do, distort what is said. What I said about the first UK whitewash hearing into Climategate and the Met. Office’s decision to stop its long-rage forecasts was “ .. shortly after that that the Met. Office discontinued its long-range forecasts because they were so useless .. ”. That is not the same thing as saying that the decision by the Met Office was a consequence of what was said at the hearing. That should remove one area of assumed disagreement between us. Others, such as the whitewashes, the validity of The Hypothesis and your belief that “code written to represent the Physical qualities of the make-up of potential weather would .. be useful not only for short-term forecasts but also as a basis for long-term climate forecasts”, will be much more difficult to clear up. Best regards, Pete Ridley
  49. It's waste heat
    CBDunkerson #8 "So... that would suggest that you should support all the changes being suggested by AGW proponents EXCEPT that you should be against nuclear power. Is that the case? " Renewable does not guarantee avoidance of warming. A black solar panel lowers the planet's albedo for instance. This is however getting off topic.
  50. Assessing global surface temperature reconstructions
    Ken Lambert writes: Ned has produced an elaborate snow job. That's a rather unkind thing to say. One of the difficulties of rebutting "skeptic" claims is that they're not uniform. One person claims that there's no warming, another that there's warming but it's from the Sun, and a third that it is anthropogenic but that it will be too small to matter. Inevitably, attempts to answer the claims from person A will lead to complaints from persons B and C that you're ignoring the real point. They may even accuse you of a "snow job" :-) Thus, we see Ken writing: It is no surprise that if you run the same core data through a software processing package - you might get similar results. But that is a surprise to many people. For years, there were all kinds of suggestions that there are problems with the GISTEMP or CRUTEM software. The fact that people wrote different software but get similar results helps dispel those claims about problems with the software. There have also been claims -- including many long arguments on this very website -- that the decrease in numbers of high-latitude stations causes an artificial warming trend. Again, the studies done by people linked in my post dispel those claims. Likewise, there are a lot of people out there who think that the GHCN adjustment process is the cause of the observed warming, and that this warming would disappear if one just went back to the "raw" data. Thus, showing that the warming signal is present in almost identical form in the raw and adjusted data helps dispel that claim. So ... if you never thought there were any problems with the GISS or CRU software, and never believed the widely publicized claims from Joe D'Aleo and Anthony Watts about the "March of the Thermometers" then congratulations. You're way ahead of a lot of your fellow "skeptics", and you can ignore this thread and focus on other arguments. But there are many, many people out there who still have doubts on these points. This thread is for them. Actually, though, you should check out the work by Ron Broberg and Nick Stokes. They've been developing a non-GHCN temperature record, using data from SYNOP reports in the GSOD database. It's quite different from GHCN, though as you can see in Figure 6 above the results are basically the same. Getting back to my point at the start of this comment: Ken, if you think it's a waste of everyone's time for us to be explaining that: * The GISS and CRU software does not introduce "artificial" warming into the temperature record. * The decline in numbers of stations does not introduce "artificial" warming into the temperature record. * The GHCN adjustment process does not introduce "artificial" warming into the temperature record. etc. then there is one constructive thing you can do. Next time one of your fellow "skeptics" makes that argument, you can correct her/him yourself, rather than waiting for me to do it.

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