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Old 09-21-2013, 08:30 PM   #1081 (permalink)
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already posted

Edit, how do you recon it "traps" heat otherwise?

 
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Old 09-22-2013, 08:56 AM   #1082 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Alteredstory View Post
What paper was it published in?
So I have to have my model published in a science journal for you to consider it?
 
Old 09-22-2013, 09:08 AM   #1083 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Occasionally6 View Post
If you think you can create a climate model, by yourself, with nothing more than Open Office, you don't know what a climate model is.



What is the difference then? If you feed the data into a model as they occurred in the real world (from a point in time in the past - or not), then see if that matches what the real world result is (at a later time), that's' validating the model. If it doesn't match, either the real world data are incomplete or the model needs revision.

If the model matches real world outcomes reliably on past climate, then it can be used with some expectation of reliability in prediction.



So?
I used physics equations, and a spreadsheet, I can teach you how if you are willing to listen and learn.

I also never said it was perfect, and I never said it disagreed with the premise that our CO2 increase is increasing the amount of Global warming. The only difference between it and many of the others is it shows that there is more warming caused by the sun than they account for.
 
Old 09-22-2013, 09:18 AM   #1084 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by P-hack View Post
already posted

Edit, how do you recon it "traps" heat otherwise?
It doesn't reflect heat, it absorbs infra-red in specific frequency ranges, then re radiates infra-red according to those same frequency ranges.

Look up emission bands, black body radiation, emissivity, and absorption spectrum.
 
Old 09-22-2013, 12:12 PM   #1085 (permalink)
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True, not even mirrors "reflect" at the quantum level. But the absorption and subsequent emission of heat energy, especially in a tangential situation like the upper atmosphere, redirect much of the solar energy back into space.

 
Old 09-22-2013, 10:07 PM   #1086 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by TheEnemy View Post
I used physics equations, and a spreadsheet, I can teach you how if you are willing to listen and learn.

I also never said it was perfect, and I never said it disagreed with the premise that our CO2 increase is increasing the amount of Global warming. The only difference between it and many of the others is it shows that there is more warming caused by the sun than they account for.
So:

It includes ocean and atmospheric currents, in 3D, and the ways in which they change with changes in atmospheric composition and heat energy?

It includes how those currents move heat around the Earth?

It includes the changes in salinity associated with temperature and how those changes affect ocean currents (and the transfer of heat)?

It includes changes in sea level due to (ocean) thermal expansion, land based ice melting, and local height changes due to altered current flows (think height of water around a bath drain while water is draining)?

It includes the effects of altitude on the quantity of heat energy trapped by GHG's? That's temperature (i.e. specific frequencies of radiant energy) and shading (all the radiated energy is captured by atmosphere closer to the radiating body) effects.

It includes the effects of all the greenhouse gases, such as HFC's and CFC's?

It models the specific heat of various soils and the rate of evaporation from and precipitation to those soils, and how that transfers heat around the Earth?

It includes local effects of SO2 emissions (cooling) and particulates (both warming and cooling)?

It includes the effect of latitude on insolation?

It divides the Earth's surface and atmosphere up into small areas/volumes so that the heat and mass transfers can be calculated between each area/volume? How small are those areas? Are they smaller where there is a lot of variation within an area/volume and coarser where there is not as much variation?

Did you include changes in vegetation that (will) occur with changes in temperature and rainfall over time (decades) and the effects that has on albedo, evaporation rates and land specific heat?

Include the changes in albedo due ice melt?

Include topography?

Does your model accurately reflect seasonal changes when the variation in insolation due to the Earth's orbit is included?

Does it include a GHG "budget" that covers where the GHG's end up eg. how much CO2 stays in the atmosphere, how much dissolves in the ocean, and how much is absorbed by biomass or how long CH4 exists as CH4 before being converted to CO2 and H2O? Does it include how that "budget" will change with changes in temperature and climate?

I'm sure there's more that I haven't thought of at the moment but all of those things I would expect to be part of a climate model (I'm not suggesting I could build one). It's not a trivial thing to do. They tend to be built up over time by many people each adding to or refining a particular piece, perhaps over a whole career. That's not something you can hope to match with a casual effort for personal interest.
 
Old 09-22-2013, 10:11 PM   #1087 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TheEnemy View Post
It doesn't reflect heat, it absorbs infra-red in specific frequency ranges, then re radiates infra-red according to those same frequency ranges.

Look up emission bands, black body radiation, emissivity, and absorption spectrum.
If I recall physics correctly, once the radiant heat energy has been absorbed (it is held in the molecule as a bond vibration that is characteristic of the particular frequency of radiation absorbed) it may, instead, be transferred to another molecule as sensible heat - molecule kinetic energy - through intermolecular collisions.
 
Old 09-22-2013, 10:32 PM   #1088 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Occasionally6 View Post
So:

It includes ocean and atmospheric currents, in 3D, and the ways in which they change with changes in atmospheric composition and heat energy?

It includes how those currents move heat around the Earth?

It includes the changes in salinity associated with temperature and how those changes affect ocean currents (and the transfer of heat)?

It includes changes in sea level due to (ocean) thermal expansion, land based ice melting, and local height changes due to altered current flows (think height of water around a bath drain while water is draining)?

It includes the effects of altitude on the quantity of heat energy trapped by GHG's? That's temperature (i.e. specific frequencies of radiant energy) and shading (all the radiated energy is captured by atmosphere closer to the radiating body) effects.

It includes the effects of all the greenhouse gases, such as HFC's and CFC's?

It models the specific heat of various soils and the rate of evaporation from and precipitation to those soils, and how that transfers heat around the Earth?

It includes local effects of SO2 emissions (cooling) and particulates (both warming and cooling)?

It includes the effect of latitude on insolation?

It divides the Earth's surface and atmosphere up into small areas/volumes so that the heat and mass transfers can be calculated between each area/volume? How small are those areas? Are they smaller where there is a lot of variation within an area/volume and coarser where there is not as much variation?

Did you include changes in vegetation that (will) occur with changes in temperature and rainfall over time (decades) and the effects that has on albedo, evaporation rates and land specific heat?

Include the changes in albedo due ice melt?

Include topography?

Does your model accurately reflect seasonal changes when the variation in insolation due to the Earth's orbit is included?

Does it include a GHG "budget" that covers where the GHG's end up eg. how much CO2 stays in the atmosphere, how much dissolves in the ocean, and how much is absorbed by biomass or how long CH4 exists as CH4 before being converted to CO2 and H2O? Does it include how that "budget" will change with changes in temperature and climate?

I'm sure there's more that I haven't thought of at the moment but all of those things I would expect to be part of a climate model (I'm not suggesting I could build one). It's not a trivial thing to do. They tend to be built up over time by many people each adding to or refining a particular piece, perhaps over a whole career. That's not something you can hope to match with a casual effort for personal interest.
No, it is a energy balance model, and before you get after me for not going that complex none of the "professionally" done models take all of that into account in one model.

Mine does however take into account albedo changes due to changes in temperature, solar variances and affects due to volcanic activity. I do intend on developing the model further, to include regional and altitude differences.
 
Old 09-22-2013, 10:37 PM   #1089 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by P-hack View Post
Do you think good old heat from energy usage might be part of the "problem"? How many BTU have been pumped into the atmosphere by using fossil fuels?
Maybe long term (energy from working fusion reactors wouldn't forever be unlimited energy without consequence) but the amount of solar energy reaching the Earth's surface is vastly greater than what we release through burning fossil fuels.
 
Old 09-22-2013, 10:37 PM   #1090 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Occasionally6 View Post
If I recall physics correctly, once the radiant heat energy has been absorbed (it is held in the molecule as a bond vibration that is characteristic of the particular frequency of radiation absorbed) it may, instead, be transferred to another molecule as sensible heat - molecule kinetic energy - through intermolecular collisions.
The energy can also be radiated off at a different frequency dependent on the temperature and emission spectrum of the molecule or atom.

 
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