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#650 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Quote:
The approximate sun-facing area of the earth is just A = pi*R^2, where R ~= 6378 km, giving A ~= 130 million km^2 Most of the radiative-balance measurements indicate an added GHG-caused forcing of ~ 2 W/m^2 = 2 MW/km^2, which translates to 260 million MW = 260,000 GW ... in line with above 190,000 GW estimate. [It is interesting to compare this with the total (internally-generated) heat loss from the earth of 4.2 × 10^13 Watts = 42,000 GW, which means external heat flux is ~5x internal) Next step - since earth's oceans are by far the biggest heat exchanger with the atmosphere, let's compute some plausible range of numbers for the resulting rate of change in oceanic temperatures, ignoring complications (albeit potentially important ones) such as changed evaporation/rainfall rates. Could someone check my numbers below? Note I absolutely am not trying to make a point here ... I just want to get some basic numbers under the simplest assumptions: ---------------- Assume oceans are perfectly efficient heat sinks (this will give a lower bound on the oceanic temperature rise). Heat capacity of water ~ 4000 J/(kg*K) = 4000 W/(kg*(K/sec)), i.e. a heat input of 4000 W will raise the average temperature of a kg of water by one degree (Kelvin or Celsius) per second Total volume of seawater in earth oceans is ~1.4 billion cubic kilometers --> mass of ~1.4*10^21 kg If all excess heat is absorbed into oceans, 190,000 GW will cause a time-averaged temperature temperature rise rate of [1.9*10^14 W] / [1.4*10^21 kg] / [4000 W/(kg*(K/sec))] ~= 0.3*10^-10 K/sec ~= 0.1 K/century. Of course the oceans can only absorb a portion of the added heat (how much is a nontrivial research question) ... if e.g. only the top 100 meters (on average) of the earth's oceans were where the bulk of the heat were absorbed, since average ocean depth is 4000 m, that would result in an ocean temperature change rate ~40x the idealized one above ... but someone please confirm/deny the above computation before we proceed further. |
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#651 |
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Aug 2003
Snicker, AL
16778 Posts |
The risk is not so much that we humans trigger a catastrophic temperature rise, rather that we trigger a mass release of methane from deep storage which reaches a critical point and begins to trap massive amounts of heat from the sun which causes further release of methane. The resulting rise in temperature would make the equatorial region largely uninhabitable and would not subside until much of the atmospheric greenhouse gases have been reduced below the critical threshold.
DarJones |
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#652 |
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1976 Toyota Corona years forever!
"Wayne"
Nov 2006
Saskatchewan, Canada
3·5·313 Posts |
Canadian Ice Breaker...
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#653 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
101101011111112 Posts |
Quote:
And why isn't Al Gore talking about Methane Doomsday ... does he like eating hamburgers too much to advocate drastic reductions in cows and their associated CH4-rich flatulence? |
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#654 | |||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
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We humans _are_ indeed taking the risk of foreseeably triggering a catastrophic temperature rise. Yes we are. - - - No, because CO2 is by far the most important anthropogenic greenhouse component right now, in terms of its proportional contribution to warming. Currently, and for some amount of additional warming in the near future, its vastly greater abundance in the atmosphere more than compensates for methane's larger per-molecule IR absorption. But it is expected that eventually the CO2-dominated warming could reach a point at which the higher temperatures could begin triggering massive releases of methane into the atmosphere. And we have not yet made any progress in slowing that CO2-dominated warming. Quote:
Quote:
Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2010-01-12 at 07:53 |
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#655 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
265778 Posts |
U.N. Panel’s Glacier Warning Is Criticized as Exaggerated:A much-publicized estimate from a United Nations panel about the rapid melting of Himalayan glaciers from climate change is coming under fire as a gross exaggeration.
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Which is not to say that the glaciers are doing just dandy, but the last paragraph of the above article again features a scientist making dire and precise-sounding numerical estimates, only to conclude with an admission of uncertainty which amounts to "we really can't put any numbers on the long-term predictions". OK, so why did you? Quote:
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#656 | ||||||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
Quote:
The full paragraph, as it appears in the article, is: Quote:
Quote:
Of course, including error estimates might make that Yao's statements seem less "dire and precise-sounding". So I don't blame you for not hunting down and quoting a fuller context, since that could only reduce the emotional impact of your insinuations. - - - BTW, here's the Nature News article on the glacier estimate mistake: http://www.nature.com/news/2010/1001...l/463276a.html It explains that there was apparently some human error in following the procedure for using non-refereed studies while writing the report. Quote:
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and there's a Nature blog entry commenting on the apology: http://blogs.nature.com/news/thegrea...himalayan.html - - - I continue to eagerly await the AGW-deniers' presentation of a hypothesis that explains the observed data as well as, or better than, the AGW hypothesis, without attributing significant effect to anthropogenic greenhouse gases. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2010-01-23 at 03:18 |
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#657 | |
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Bamboozled!
"𒉺𒌌𒇷𒆷𒀭"
May 2003
Down not across
250428 Posts |
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However, I would like to read your thoughts on the matter because I believe the question probes an important component of the whole matter of GW. Thanks, Paul |
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#658 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
265778 Posts |
Quote:
Briefly: In the short run, absent any violently nonlinear countereffects or the system having been extremely close to some kind of tipping point to begin with (both of which appear to be reasonable assumptions based on trends of the past century), indeed, to first order one expects response to follow forcing, i.e. to see a quasi-linear local response. In this case, more lower-stratosphere radiation absorption means a warmer troposphere. Extrapolating those trends to larger and/or longer-term forcing - where nonlinearity, complex interactions and time lags of various disparate components of the climate system do matter greatly - is where things get tricky, and this is where numerical modeling is really our only viable option, and as I have noted, that`s where the "scientific consensus" argument falls apart, because the uncertainty of the modeling is far, far larger than the folks at the IPCC care to admit. To claim that "the models agree" even with respect to the sign of the expected changes 50-100 years out is just plain bad science. |
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#659 |
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Random Account
Aug 2009
13·151 Posts |
Why cannot anyone speak of this in practical terms?
All I can say is that something is different with the environment. I had never heard of severe thunderstorms in L.A. until recently; large hail, damaging winds, tornado's. Where I live, this time of the year is normally the coldest. Not this time. 50°F, or higher, for nearly a week. It's not just in a few places, it's a lot of places seeing conditions radically different than what is/was considered normal. Those who claim there is not a problem do not want to see the problem...
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2010-01-26 at 17:24 Reason: Removed all-bold |
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#660 | |
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6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
101×103 Posts
3·17·193 Posts |
Quote:
Infamous New Year’s Day Flood, Los Angeles Basin, 1934 Freak Storm Leaves Los Angeles Under a Foot of Hail 1938 Severe flooding claims 78 lives and causes almost $25 million in damage. 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944 The Los Angeles River overflows and causes floods. March 1983 Tornado damages the Los Angeles Convention Center Years with multiple tropical cyclones that have affected Southern California this century People have short memories. Great Lakes Blizzard of 1977 |
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