Got tired of the Cabbage Farts so he's on ignore; things smell a lot better now.You gave me lies to be quite honest. Clearly the facts do not support you so like a typical Moonbat you create your own "facts" and convince yourself that they are real.
Like Solyndra was "Bush's baby". That is just ridiculous. No basis of reality. The Obama Administration isn't even saying that. You are.
Oh, I understand the irony in this Cabbage, but your post about Dean Swift was too tempting to not recognize.... Reminds me of a Black Adder episode that discussed the cause of WW1.
"I heard that it started when a bloke called Archie Duke shot an ostrich 'cause he was hungry."
Actually, now that I think of it; you're kinda like Baldrick in many regards
No he isn't, cabbage fart kid.You are embarrassing yourself.
cabbagefarts is still trying to say the study published in the journal of atmospheric and solar-terrestrial physics isn't true.
Even with it's out of the ballpark 0.98 correlation coefficient.
denier!!!!
Oh moving the goal posts now? LMAO
Trying to tie the Energy Policy Act of 2005 to Obama giving Solyndra the loans in 2009. How desperate can you get. Hey bright one... the money wasn't set up so it could be wasted by future administrations on failed ventures like Solyndra.
I bet you even like that Bush policy don't you?
Keep jumping from foot to foot and do your dance... I am enjoying it immensely!
PWNED
Why don't you care about the truth? It's too hard to wrap your head around being lied to for so long?i do not care whether it is 'true.' it is irrelevant and little known. It has not a thing to do with climate change.
You're nucking futs. Way back in 2009 the Danish discovered the effect of the magnetosphere on climate. http://phys.org/news151003157.htmlIt has not a thing to do with climate change.
Are you really nuts?
I think. petros, you should try to regoogle the SAA and try to read whatever you find. I don't want to be so unkind as to agree that you are bats... - you know the rest so try to find somewhere in it any support for what you are claiming.
The particular gentlemen you are trying to dredge up are almost unheard of in the Geophysical world let alone authorities on climate change. There is also absolutely no correlation to what you are claiming. There is an attempted link in their work to Galactic Cosmis Rays and that chameleon has long since been disposed of.
There's a lot of things that influence climate. The best indicator is not the CC of this, that, or the other thing, but it's the net energy flux that is the most indicative of climate change. Basically that means at this point in time we are hanging onto more energy from MOST of the influences than we are shedding or reflecting. That means the planet gets warmer. And human activities DO have an impact. There's been many instances in various scientific fields showing that we periodically push things off-balance. It wouldn't surprise me in the least if we've done it with climate balances.
You're nucking futs. Way back in 2009 the Danish discovered the effect of the magnetosphere on climate. <a href="http://phys.org/news151003157.html" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">http://phys.org/news151003157.html
uhuh I do not see the cause of global warming being attributed to human activities, though. The planet has been going through the cycles of warming and cooling over thousands of centuries. I think (based upon a lot of reading) we've merely extended the latest warming stage of a cycle.Of course there's a lot of things that influence climate and one of the most important based on the science going back into the late 1600s is the presence of compounds in the atmosphere that moderate the radiative balance of the globe...and the most important persistant compound for the greenhouse effect of the atmosphere is carbon dioxide. A gas we're rapidly increasing the concentration of while at the same time seeing marked changes in the Earth's environment, not the least of which is the changes in ice and snow cover.
Yes, but not as rapidly as you might think. The effect of GHGs on climate is logarithmic, not linear. What has more effect is a snowballing (scuse the pun) where our reflectivity is lessened by darker areas on the planet (and a few other things). The normal cycle of cooling and warming is self-aggravating. The planet will cool again and I really doubt there's much we can do at this point to aggravate warming much more than we have nor much we can do to stop it.Basically what more CO2, CH4, N2O and a bunch of manmade compounds like CFCs do is slow the rate at which long wave electromagnetic radiation is transmitted back into space. The higher the concentration of these compounds the more opaque the atmosphere becomes to the heat being released by the Earth's surface and the more heat is transmitted back to the surface that otherwise would be emitted into space. The greenhouse gases are one of the most significant factors in moderating the Earths' energy balance and we're rapidly changing that.
Yeah, we changed the rate of warming. I agree. But we did not cause the warming.We have not had the ability to force the earth's radiative balance to a new higher state at this rate and to this degree in the past, the first major effect we've had on the planet was wet agriculture in Asia and the Pacific rim which has probably stabilized the Earth's climate since the end of the last glacial period by producing methane. What we're doing now is orders of magnitude over an activity that already had signifcant effects.
I know that's not the point, but Cabbagefarts claimed that the magnetosphere had nothing to do with the climate. That's just plain BS so I said so.That's not the issue, there are many things that influence the earth's climate, as I've just posted the make-up of the atmosphere is one of the most important for it's ability to redirect outgoing longwave radiation back to Earth's surface. The Earth's magnetic field plays an important role in moderating the global environment, it doesn't nullify the effects of rapidly increasing the amounts of the most important persistant greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
I doubt it. It will certainly change the rate of the natural cycle, though.Unless you rewrite the Standard Model and basically revolutionize all of science today then it's pretty much a given that rapidly and significantly altering the Earth's radiative balance by the emission of BILLIONS of tons of greenhouse gases a year will dramatically alter the Earth's climate.
but no-one seems willing to post how much of an influence our activity has had in comparison to natural forcings here lately.There's far more energy present in the system,
Yeah, I took highschool physics and chemistry, too, thanks.looking at the Greenland icesheet alone which is losing around 200 billions tons a year we can see the affect of this, it takes 81 times the energy to melt a gram of ice as it does to heat a gram of water by one degree C.
The amount of "new" energy that comes along each warming period is staggering anyway. The situation will reverse again.That's for the Greenland ice sheet alone which is just a fraction of the Earth's surface, the amount of new energy in the system is staggering.
Who's doing that?Trying to pull magical rabbits out of a hat to make the issue go away like this is pointless and indicates a lack of understanding, not insight into the issue.
Ya think?Sometimes what you don't know(or don't want to know) can kill you.
I think wifey & I are doing a pretty good job of keeping our contribution to pollution to a minimum. YepIf you knew the magnetosphere was dimishing and knew full well there was nothing we can do about it, would you at least try to curb warming effects of ionizing radiation by easing carbon output?
I'd do both.If people knew would they want their money to go keeping CO2 in balance or to fight the cancers that the radiation will induce?
I've done mine too, maybe not for just to be clean but because the Eco-Energy incentives were worth it. It would have been stupid not to.I think wifey & I are doing a pretty good job of keeping our contribution to pollution to a minimum. Yep
I'd do both.
uhuh I do not see the cause of global warming being attributed to human activities, though. The planet has been going through the cycles of warming and cooling over thousands of centuries. I think (based upon a lot of reading) we've merely extended the latest warming stage of a cycle.
Yes, but not as rapidly as you might think. The effect of GHGs on climate is logarithmic, not linear. What has more effect is a snowballing (scuse the pun) where our reflectivity is lessened by darker areas on the planet. The normal cycle of cooling and warming is self-aggravating. The planet will cool again and I really doubt there's much we can do at this point to aggravate warming much more than we have nor much we can do to stop it.
Yeah, we changed the rate of warming. I agree. But we did not cause the warming.
I know that's not the point, but Cabbagefarts claimed that the magnetosphere had nothing to do with the climate. That's just plain BS so I said so.
I doubt it. It will certainly change the rate of the natural cycle, though. but no-one seems willing to post how much of an influence our activity has had in comparison to natural forcings here lately.Yeah, I took highschool physics and chemistry, too, thanks.The amount of "new" energy that comes along each warming period is staggering anyway. The situation will reverse again.
Who's doing that?
Ya think?
Based on what, the basic Quantum Electrodynamics demand that as you increase the concentration of atmospheric GHGs the raditiave balance will shift to a more energetic state.
I think wifey & I are doing a pretty good job of keeping our contribution to pollution to a minimum. Yep
I'd do both.
Good luck with combating the effects of ionized(not ionizing) radiation as the issue with Anthropogenic Global warming is due to increases in the rate of transmission of electromagnetic radiation of different wavelengths within the Earth's atmosphere. The shorter wavelength radiation coming from the sun isn't absorbed to the same degree the outgoing longerwave radiation emitted from the Earth's surface.
It has nothing to do with the magnetosphere, it has to do with the effect of increased concentrations of molecules in the air like carbon dioxide that absorb and re-radiate energy that otherwise would have passed into space.
NASA is wrong too? I told you to read close. but noooooo. LOLThis paper considers the process of upper atmosphere heating by the wave and corpuscular ionizing radiation.
Even with it's out of the ballpark 0.98 correlation coefficient.
I am tying nothing. I am informing you of facts. One of which is that it was a project of little Georgie.
Not PAWNED. I could not get antone to give anything for you.
Yeah, that's pretty high. It would be even more impressive if the ranks weren't smoothed.
It's still interesting, but you're reaching too far with your extrapolations. Even the authors noted they could not link the SAA to global warming.
In fact if you read the discussion in that paper you'll note that one speculative causal relationship would not even have an effect on surface temperatures. Other reserachers have investigated for correlations between geomagnetic activity and temperature, and found that the relationships were not significant at all:
Recent studies have led to speculation that solar-terrestrial interaction, measured by sunspot number and geomagnetic activity, has played an important role in global temperature change over the past century or so. We treat this possibility as an hypothesis for testing. We examine the statistical significance of cross-correlations between sunspot number, geomagnetic activity, and global surface temperature for the years 1868–2008, solar cycles 11–23. The data contain substantial autocorrelation and nonstationarity, properties that are incompatible with standard measures of cross-correlational significance, but which can be largely removed by averaging over solar cycles and first-difference detrending. Treated data show an expected statistically-significant correlation between sunspot number and geomagnetic activity, Pearson p < 10−4, but correlations between global temperature and sunspot number (geomagnetic activity) are not significant, p = 0.9954, (p = 0.8171). In other words, straightforward analysis does not support widely-cited suggestions that these data record a prominent role for solar-terrestrial interaction in global climate change. With respect to the sunspot-number, geomagnetic-activity, and global-temperature data, three alternative hypotheses remain difficult to reject: (1) the role of solar-terrestrial interaction in recent climate change is contained wholly in long-term trends and not in any shorter-term secular variation, or, (2) an anthropogenic signal is hiding correlation between solar-terrestrial variables and global temperature, or, (3) the null hypothesis, recent climate change has not been influenced by solar-terrestrial interaction.Long-term signal seems very unlikely, if you accept that in the first paper they found significant signal in the correlation between sea level and the SAA once they smoothed the data with 5-year averages.