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A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming (Read 7015 times)
Jan
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #15 - Feb 24th, 2012 at 6:01pm
 
Cont from previous ...

Atmospheric CO2 enrichment brings growth and prosperity to man and nature alike.
This, then, is what we truly believe will be the result of the ongoing rise in the air's CO2 content: a reinvigorated biosphere characteristic of those prior periods of earth's history when the air's CO2 concentration was much higher than it is today, coupled with a climate not much different from that of the present. Are we right? Only time will tell. But one thing is certain now: there is much more real-world evidence for the encouraging scenario we paint here than for the doom-and-gloom predictions of apocalypse that are preached by those who blindly follow the manifestly less-than-adequate prognostications of imperfect climate models.

Our policy prescription relative to anthropogenic CO2 emissions is thus to leave well enough alone and let nature and humanity take their inextricably intertwined course. All indications are that both will be well served by the ongoing rise in atmospheric CO2.

Supporting references. This brief was written in 1998. References to the voluminous scientific literature that supports the many factual statements of this position paper may be found on our website - www.co2science.org - which we update weekly.


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muso
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #16 - Feb 24th, 2012 at 10:04pm
 
Jan wrote on Feb 24th, 2012 at 5:24pm:
muso wrote on Feb 24th, 2012 at 3:20pm:
Jan - First explain that you know what you are arguing against and I'll take your post seriously, because from your post, I'm sorry but you don't have a clue.


HUH! I thought I made it admirably clear I was arguing against the CO2 global warming crap, that is being bandied about by those who have an 'agenda'. Why did you mention it if you didn't know.

Do YOU have a clue? Because judging from your post the only clue you have is how to make yourself look like a sceptic par excellence, and not a genuine enquirer.

Quote:
It's the first rule of debate that you need to understand what you're arguing about.


Yes indeed it is ... So! what are you arguing about, and what is your understanding?

Quote:
Now are you saying that carbon dioxide is not a greenhouse gas?


Please post a quote of me saying that ... People who have to twist words to suit their understanding of a statement belong in the ignoramous IQ category. 

Quote:
What's your understanding of radiative transfer?


What's yours?

Quote:
If you can't answer the basics, then you're not really qualified to say "Anyone who still believes the crap about CO2 etc are ignorant of our planet and how it works and has worked."


Can YOU answer the basics, and are you qualified to refute what I have stated?
I have stated the basics, you just can't read with the comprehension needed to nut it out, or research the answers for yourself. Please feel free to add your own version of facts, from a source that is not written by sceptics, and not just a denial of presented FACTS!!!

Quote:
In short, you're arguing from a position of proud ignorance


I speak from a good study regimen and information from extremely well qualified teachers for more than 20 years ... what do you base your 'opinions' about me on? The ignorance is yours not mine.

 


I doubt that very much.  The evidence is against low climate sensitivity. If you had been studying the subject you'd know what that is. Read through the posts on the top of this board. That explains some of the basics.

Changing ocean pH, and the reduction of calcification rates are probably the most serious issues that we'll have to contend with in the next 100 years or so.

Idso's article is not saying very much. It's saying that we have had higher temparatures and higher CO2 levels in the past. That's correct, but you have to go back millions of years to get CO2 levels similar to those of today. The issue nowadays is the sheer volume of carbon dioxide being added to the atmospheric inventory every year.   

Environmental management is my profession, so I know a bit more than the basics, such as how to derive the radiative forcing equations. I  have a sound understanding of the atmospheric physics.  I can also recognise nonsense and waffle when I see it, and the "Idso's" are incapable of writing anything else. 
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #17 - Feb 24th, 2012 at 10:32pm
 
ahahaha
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Jan
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #18 - Feb 25th, 2012 at 1:15am
 
muso wrote on Feb 24th, 2012 at 10:04pm:
I doubt that very much.  The evidence is against low climate sensitivity. If you had been studying the subject you'd know what that is. Read through the posts on the top of this board. That explains some of the basics.


Strewth!! Anyone can find this out "low climate sensitivity" is how much the earth’s average temperature will rise as a result of increased concentration of carbon dioxide", wow!!! a brilliant deduction from the PROMOTERS of The CO2 crap. You blokes can't figure out that global warming is a scam to make bigger and better profits and reduce our wealth even further ... When has the Zionist owned media ever told the truth, or given an unbiased report on anything proposed by government.

Quote:
Changing ocean pH, and the reduction of calcification rates are probably the most serious issues that we'll have to contend with in the next 100 years or so.


Do you even understand pH levels or what the cause/effects are? Oceans ABSORB CO2 and release OXYGEN. Phytoplankton that live near the ocean’s surface photosynthesize sunlight, ie. they use sunlight and
carbon dioxide
to make food. A byproduct of
photosynthesis
is oxygen.

Acidity (or low pH balance) of the oceans can be caused by a number of things, chemical and oil spills, sewage and waste disposal into the oceans just to name a few. low pH levels cause low calcification of the oceans and affect many oceanic organisms and can be triggered by warmer waters ... and water temperatures are controled "by the Sun".

Quote:
Idso's article is not saying very much. It's saying that we have had higher temparatures and higher CO2 levels in the past. That's correct, but you have to go back millions of years to get CO2 levels similar to those of today. The issue nowadays is the sheer volume of carbon dioxide being added to the atmospheric inventory every year.


What do you call "not very much"? More or less than you? Millions of years huh? Does that include the times of previous "pole sifts" when the equator was in a different locality. 

Quote:
Environmental management is my profession, so I know a bit more than the basics, such as how to derive the radiative forcing equations. I  have a sound understanding of the atmospheric physics.  I can also recognise nonsense and waffle when I see it, and the "Idso's" are incapable of writing anything else.


OMG!!!! A weatherman taking on "The Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global Change" Go on! amaze us with your radiative forcing equations ... no copy paste now, in your own words and calculations will suffice!

Do your qualifications surpass Idso's?

Idso's current research focus is on carbon sequestration, but he remains actively involved in several other aspects of global and environmental change, including climatology and meteorology, along with their impacts on agriculture. Idso has published scientific articles on issues related to data quality, the growing season, the seasonal cycle of atmospheric CO2, world food supplies, coral reefs, and urban CO2 concentrations, the latter of which he investigated via a National Science Foundation grant as a faculty researcher in the Office of Climatology at Arizona State University. In addition, he has lectured in Meteorology at Arizona State University, and in Physical Geography at Mesa and Chandler-Gilbert Community Colleges. From 2001-2002, Idso served as Director of Environmental Science at Peabody Energy in St. Louis, MO.

Idso is a global warming skeptic. He is co-author with Fred Singer and Robert M. Carter of the reports of the
Nongovernmental
International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC), a study group of global warming skeptics. Idso advocates that increasing atmosphere carbon dioxide concentrations will instead benefit plant growth.[4] With his name on 67 papers, Idso was the most represented author in a list of 938 peer reviewed papers alleged to be skeptical of global warming. The documents leaked in the Heartland Institute document leak indicate Idso is paid $11,600 per month by the Heartland Institute as part of its advocacy related to climate science. Idso is a science adviser to the Science and Public Policy Institute.


The key to Idso's qualifications is the very telling "Non-governmental" ie. he isn't PAID by the government to say what THEY want said.

Anyone who goes along with anything governments say is to be taken with a grain of salt ... however I'm prepared to have you prove your qualifications and just how much you really know. Just leave out the weather BS as that can be refuted as well.

The sun controls the weather not CO2. ALL scientists knew this ... until manmade CO2 and Global warming became the governments agenda.


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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #19 - Feb 25th, 2012 at 11:08am
 
Cutting across the b/s:

Craig Idso:   

B.S. in Geography from Arizona State University
M.S. in Agronomy from the University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Ph.D. in Geography from Arizona State University; his thesis was on the amplitude of the difference between winter and summer atmospheric CO2 levels. (wow!)

His brother is Keith E. Idso. He's co-author of this "learned paper"  He states that he is Vice President of the Idso family's Phoenix, AZ "Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global Change."

Keith has a B.S. in Agriculture with a major in Plant Sciences from the University of Arizona and his M.S. from the same institution with a major in Agronomy and Plant Genetics.

Poppa is Sherwood Idso. He started the famiy denialist business. He's also a learned farmer. (Ok Soil scientist). (He has a minor in Meterorology. )

Then there's Jalene Idso. She's the Operations Manager. I guess she'd be in charge of general farmin' , larnin' an cookin'.

So yes, I am much more qualified that any of the Idso clan. I'm not a meteorologist. That's a totally different discipline.  My first degree was in Chemistry, My second was in Environmental Science. That includes Atmospheric science, chemistry, climatology and hydrology plus such subjects as toxicology and legislation.

Geography and Agronomy degrees are not really relevent to atmospheric phenomena.

Anyone can form a private organisation called just about anything. I could form a business called the "Economic Analysis Foundation of Australia" if I wanted. It would look good on my business card to be President of the Economic Analysis Foundation even if I had no qualifications in that field.

Maybe I should call it the Centre for Galactic  Economics. Do you think that would be more impressive? 

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Jan
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #20 - Feb 25th, 2012 at 2:39pm
 
muso wrote on Feb 25th, 2012 at 11:08am:
Cutting across the b/s:


Aww You didn't answer this: "Go on! amaze us with your radiative forcing equations ... no copy paste now, in your own words and calculations will suffice!"

I was so looking forward to your equations ... and watch you cut your own throat.

Oh and you also left the best part of Idso's profile:

Idso's current research focus is on carbon sequestration, but he remains actively involved in several other aspects of global and environmental change, including climatology and meteorology, along with their impacts on agriculture. Idso has published scientific articles on issues related to data quality, the growing season, the seasonal cycle of atmospheric CO2, world food supplies, coral reefs, and urban CO2 concentrations, the latter of which he investigated via a National Science Foundation grant as a faculty researcher in the Office of Climatology at Arizona State University. In addition, he has lectured in Meteorology at Arizona State University, and in Physical Geography at Mesa and Chandler-Gilbert Community Colleges. From 2001-2002, Idso served as Director of Environmental Science at Peabody Energy in St. Louis, MO.

Quote:
Maybe I should call it the Centre for Galactic  Economics. Do you think that would be more impressive?


Why not International Parsing processing of Climate Change? ... IPCC looks really cool.

I've been studying RF (infomally) for around 13 years through a friend who is a radio ham, his name is Kev Peacock, who studied the atmosphere and it's different levels, because he wanted to know everything about radio waves and what effect RF had on 'sending and receiving'. He wrote an ebook about 14 years ago, titled "something is wrong with the Sun". He also invented and manufactured a free standing one man erection  communications tower (no crane or assistance required to erect it). He is now retired.

Find him here http://users.spin.net.au/~aeitower/, and click on his page on Climate change ... talk to him and tell him Jan sent you.


 
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #21 - Feb 25th, 2012 at 5:54pm
 
It just goes to show that there's no fool like....

Anyway, what's the point of explaining atmospheric physics if you don't have the faintest idea what I'm talking about. It would be a one sided conversation. If you search my posts I already tried that once before.

What aspects of RF have you been studying? Propagation?

I was a radio ham for many years, and still hold some dx records for 70cm and 23cm ATV  using homebrew equipment back in the 70's.  I operated from GM, 5Z4, LA VK3 VK5 and VK6, and I agree with your friend's remark about cw, having completed many cw QSO's at 30wpm on 70cm bounced off the auroral curtain between GM and LA, SM and further afield. Typical signals were 51A, so that should impress your friend at least. ( I had a lot more on 2m, but that's commonplace)

Getting back on topic, the main interest is electromagnetic radiation in the  10-15 micron band, peaking around 350 Watts per square metre. Have you studied that yet? If so, what can you tell us about it? I don't know about  Solar Cycle 25, but there is something definitely wrong about the former.  It's being attentuated by something at a measurably higher rate now than it was in the 70's.

Would you say that it's bending or stretching? TX or RX? Near or Far?

I look forward to your responses. You won't be able to Google the answer, but anyone with half a clue and a knowledge of ham radio will understand what I'm asking.
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Jan
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #22 - Feb 25th, 2012 at 9:16pm
 
muso wrote on Feb 25th, 2012 at 5:54pm:
It just goes to show that there's no fool like....

Anyway, what's the point of explaining atmospheric physics if you don't have the faintest idea what I'm talking about. It would be a one sided conversation. If you search my posts I already tried that once before.


I know enought about the interaction between air pollution and climate to satisfy myself that we are being conned by 'vested' interests and blindsided by scientific bullsh!t and indecipherable equations that the average person hasn't a hope of unravelling, hence the popular notion that manmade CO2 proliferation is the cause for 'warming'.

Tell me! Why did the last ice age end? Was it because the planet became warmer?  and if that's the case, to what do you attribute the planet's rise in temperature? Who (or what) produced all that CO2 way back then?

Quote:
What aspects of RF have you been studying? Propagation?


I never said I was a Ham radio operator I said My friend Kev was, who has been teaching me about THE SUN!!! Kev's actual profession is a Mechanical Engineer and has been into electronics for 30 years, his daughter is also a ham. I learned a smattering about ham radio through our friendship, and was introduced to another ham, Dan Simmonds from Pennsylvania, who came out and stayed for a few months, he's a tower manufacturer too http://www.anwireless.com/

Quote:
I was a radio ham for many years, and still hold some dx records for 70cm and 23cm ATV  using homebrew equipment back in the 70's.  I operated from GM, 5Z4, LA VK3 VK5 and VK6, and I agree with your friend's remark about cw, having completed many cw QSO's at 30wpm on 70cm bounced off the auroral curtain between GM and LA, SM and further afield. Typical signals were 51A, so that should impress your friend at least. ( I had a lot more on 2m, but that's commonplace)


Don't let your ego run away with you, Kev doesn't impress easily.

Quote:
Getting back on topic, the main interest is electromagnetic radiation in the  10-15 micron band, peaking around 350 Watts per square metre. Have you studied that yet? If so, what can you tell us about it? I don't know about  Solar Cycle 25, but there is something definitely wrong about the former.  It's being attentuated by something at a measurably higher rate now than it was in the 70's.


I haven't studied any radio operation, stop wagging your willy ... Ask Kev about cycle 25 he knows more than I ever could, I just know there's something awry about the Sun, which I learned from kev too.

Quote:
Would you say that it's bending or stretching? TX or RX? Near or Far?


Like I said I don't know about radio waves I'm content to ask questions of Kev when necessary, this hardly seems necessary.

Quote:
I look forward to your responses. You won't be able to Google the answer, but anyone with half a clue and a knowledge of ham radio will understand what I'm asking.


Don't be silly you can google anything these days you just have to know what to ask. But I'm not into copy paste, I like to put things in my own words, even if they are unintelligable to the inquirer.

73s Jan


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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #23 - Feb 25th, 2012 at 10:02pm
 
Jan wrote on Feb 25th, 2012 at 9:16pm:
.


I know enought about the interaction between air pollution and climate to satisfy myself that we are being conned by 'vested' interests and blindsided by scientific bullsh!t and indecipherable equations that the average person hasn't a hope of unravelling, hence the popular notion that manmade CO2 proliferation is the cause for 'warming'.

Tell me! Why did the last ice age end? Was it because the planet became warmer?  and if that's the case, to what do you attribute the planet's rise in temperature? Who (or what) produced all that CO2 way back then?



If you don't understand about Milankovic cycles and the causes of glacial cycles, then I'm afraid your second paragraph contradicts the first. You have just demonstrated that you don't understand even the basics.

The first thing you need to understand is how the Earth's energy balance works. Obviously the source of the energy is the sun, and obviously variations in the Earth's orbit change the energy from the sun.  That's the starting point to understanding. Imagine the earth as a rock without an atmosphere. Change the distance to the sun and you change its temperature. If you put the atmosphere back in, you get exactly the same effect, but lots of other factors also come into play.

In fact we can estimate what the temperature of the Earth should be as a first approximation by considering solar irradiance alone. Do you think that first estimate would be on the high side or the low side? - and why?

I'm quite happy to try to explain the science to you if you lose the attitude.  Feel free to jump in if there is something you disagree with. The bit that gets my gander up is the arrogant ignorance. Try to admit that even in your 70's, you don't know everything, and listen for a change. You never know, you might actually realise that you've been led up the garden path. The best thing that could happen is that you might learn something. 

The Scientific perspective as taught in all educational institutes throughout the world is not as simplistic as you have been led to believe.

Before I begin, do you think that there is any slight possibility that you could be wrong? It's important because it will determine whether I continue or not.
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #24 - Feb 26th, 2012 at 9:50am
 
Jan wrote on Feb 25th, 2012 at 9:16pm:
Don't be silly you can google anything these days you just have to know what to ask. But I'm not into copy paste, I like to put things in my own words, even if they are unintelligable to the inquirer.

73s Jan



... and that's the crux in this case.  Do you know what to ask? If you do, then you should easily be able to answer my questions.
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #25 - Feb 26th, 2012 at 9:54am
 
Jan wrote on Feb 25th, 2012 at 9:16pm:
[quote author=5F47415D320 link=1330043618/21#21 date=1330156444]

Like I said I don't know about radio waves I'm content to ask questions of Kev when necessary, this hardly seems necessary.



Aha! Now that statement alone infers that you think that the 10-15 micron band is classified as radio waves.  That reinforces to me that you don't actually have a clue. Please stop pretending that you do.  You said previously that you were studying RF.

Jan wrote on Feb 25th, 2012 at 2:39pm:
I've been studying RF (infomally) for around 13 years through a friend who is a radio ham....
 


13 years, and you don't yet know the difference between radio waves and infrared radiation?  Maybe you should study something for which you have more aptitude, such as needlepoint.  Did this study of RF consist entirely of listening to demodulated RF on the 108-118MHz broadcast band?
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #26 - Feb 26th, 2012 at 10:33am
 
muso wrote on Feb 25th, 2012 at 10:02pm:
Tell me! Why did the last ice age end? Was it because the planet became warmer?  and if that's the case, to what do you attribute the planet's rise in temperature? Who (or what) produced all that CO2 way back then? unquote

If you don't understand about Milankovic cycles and the causes of glacial cycles, then I'm afraid your second paragraph contradicts the first. You have just demonstrated that you don't understand even the basics.


How does asking YOU what caused the last glacial period have anything to do with what I know? I understand the Milankovic 'theory', to know it is not a definitive answer. CO2 is only one of the causes for rising temperatures (or lowering). I may not be able to define my answers in acedemic gobbledegoop, (that other members can't understand either), but I DO understand principles, both ethics AND fundemental sources. 'Understanding' is the key to 'knowledge' not a learned by rote or scientific equations. All sciences are merely THEORIES anyway ... nothing is caste in concrete.

Quote:
The first thing you need to understand is how the Earth's energy balance works. Obviously the source of the energy is the sun, and obviously variations in the Earth's orbit change the energy from the sun.  That's the starting point to understanding. Imagine the earth as a rock without an atmosphere. Change the distance to the sun and you change its temperature. If you put the atmosphere back in, you get exactly the same effect, but lots of other factors also come into play.


Been there done that (yawn)

Don't be so arrogant in your attitude. I've already told you I was taught about the sun by Kev, I've read his book (he gave me the first copy when he completed it). As I said before I may not be able to give you "technical" answers but that does not mean I don't understand the PRINCIPLES. You tell me nothing here that Kev hasn't already taught me. Your big mistake is an over exercised ego that assumes no-one is as intelligent as yourself. It is YOU who is saying you have all the answers not me.   

Quote:
In fact we can estimate what the temperature of the Earth should be as a first approximation by considering solar irradiance alone. Do you think that first estimate would be on the high side or the low side? - and why?


Sigh! You tell me oh master. Considering we are 'theoretically' in the last throes of the interglacial (holocene) period it should be lower ... However as I said before it's all theory and doesn't take into consideration 'unknown' factors (or factors outside scientific academe).


Quote:
I'm quite happy to try to explain the science to you if you lose the attitude.  Feel free to jump in if there is something you disagree with. The bit that gets my gander up is the arrogant ignorance. Try to admit that even in your 70's, you don't know everything, and listen for a change. You never know, you might actually realise that you've been led up the garden path. The best thing that could happen is that you might learn something. 


I'm always up to learning 'something new' providing it is in terms that everyone can understand and not just for 'schooled' academics.

I 'try' to reply to posts in language that EVERYONE can understand, I'm not out to showcase my ego, I'm here to learn as well as impart 'knowledge', and I only become 'arrogant' when someone deliberately tries to sabotage or ridicule what I have written, or replies arrogantly. ie. I treat as I find, and ridicule is one of my major dislikes.

Quote:
The Scientific perspective as taught in all educational institutes throughout the world is not as simplistic as you have been led to believe.


I never said it was??? In fact I consider it overly complicated, simple has the best chance of success, Simple = easy.

Quote:
Before I begin, do you think that there is any slight possibility that you could be wrong? It's important because it will determine whether I continue or not.


I'm not that arrogant, everyone can be wrong and I am prepared to admit when I am ... You are acting like a know it all professor about to 'educate' a first grader. Why not discuss or debate the pros and cons without all the huff and puff ... after all we are discussing a very debatable topic and we want 'everyone' reading this thread to 'understand' the pros and cons.



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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #27 - Feb 26th, 2012 at 11:08am
 
Jan wrote on Feb 26th, 2012 at 10:33am:
Quote:
In fact we can estimate what the temperature of the Earth should be as a first approximation by considering solar irradiance alone. Do you think that first estimate would be on the high side or the low side? - and why?


Sigh! You tell me oh master. Considering we are 'theoretically' in the last throes of the interglacial (holocene) period it should be lower ... However as I said before it's all theory and doesn't take into consideration 'unknown' factors (or factors outside scientific academe).


It is lower because of the greenhouse effect. You don't appreciate the meaning of the word theory.  An understanding of such "theory" enables us to build computers and other electronic equipment.


Quote:
I'm always up to learning 'something new' providing it is in terms that everyone can understand and not just for 'schooled' academics.


I'll try to explain the mechanism of radiative transfer without using any maths. (Now that's not easy, but I'll try)

Quote:
I'm not out to showcase my ego, I'm here to learn as well as impart 'knowledge', and I only become 'arrogant' when someone deliberately tries to sabotage or ridicule what I have written, or replies arrogantly. ie. I treat as I find, and ridicule is one of my major dislikes.

You open yourself up for ridicule by remarks like this:
Quote:
As I said before I may not be able to give you "technical" answers but that does not mean I don't understand the PRINCIPLES.

So far I haven't delved into anything more than elementary school science. If you can't grasp that, then that means precisely  that you don't understand the principles.

If I started talking in diatribes about Tolstoy and it became apparent that I the only thing I knew about him was that he was a Russian author, then I would expect to be ridiculed too.

If I see arrogant nonsense, my response can appear arrogant. I realise that this is non-productive, so try not to stir me up  Grin

Quote:
I never said it was??? In fact I consider it overly complicated, simple has the best chance of success, Simple = easy.


You implied that it was, by this comment:

Quote:
Who (or what) produced all that CO2 way back then?


Quote:
Quote:
Before I begin, do you think that there is any slight possibility that you could be wrong? It's important because it will determine whether I continue or not.


I'm not that arrogant, everyone can be wrong and I am prepared to admit when I am ... You are acting like a know it all professor about to 'educate' a first grader. Why not discuss or debate the pros and cons without all the huff and puff ... after all we are discussing a very debatable topic and we want 'everyone' reading this thread to 'understand' the pros and cons.


You're acting as if you know all the answers. Here's an example:

Quote:
I know enought about the interaction between air pollution and climate to satisfy myself that we are being conned by 'vested' interests and blindsided by scientific bullsh!t and indecipherable equations that the average person hasn't a hope of unravelling,


That's a very arrogant and ignorant assertion. I hope you realise that now.  I assure you that you don't know enough. Let's be frank. You don't even know the difference between radio waves and infrared. So let's continue in a non-judgemental way. I'll attempt to fill in the gaps in your knowledge as time permits.

Do you understand where the greenhouse effect acts? Try to answer honestly and I'll be kind.

also - Explain what you understand by the term "Water dewpoint"

I need to know what concepts you understand first. Also ask your friend to come on here. It's about time we had somebody with some technical knowledge.
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Jan
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #28 - Feb 26th, 2012 at 5:09pm
 
muso wrote on Feb 26th, 2012 at 11:08am:
[That's a very arrogant and ignorant assertion. I hope you realise that now.  I assure you that you don't know enough. Let's be frank. You don't even know the difference between radio waves and infrared. So let's continue in a non-judgemental way. I'll attempt to fill in the gaps in your knowledge as time permits.

Do you understand where the greenhouse effect acts? Try to answer honestly and I'll be kind.

also - Explain what you understand by the term "Water dewpoint"

I need to know what concepts you understand first. Also ask your friend to come on here. It's about time we had somebody with some technical knowledge.


O' f'chrissake!!! you don't even know what I have said, you answer NOTHING and then demand I answer questions that have nothing to do with anything discussed before.

I received an email from Kev after I forwarded a previous post to him. Here's his response, in full and in a way even a child can understand.



LOL - Your "friend" is a little bit "over the top" mate - the sort that loves to use the little bit he knows to make himself appear smarter than those who are not familiar with terminology.

He is saying he worked aural scatter from Scotland (GM), Sweden (SM) and Norway (LA) and he has operated from Scotland, Kenya (5Z4), Victoria (VK3), South Australia (VK5) and Western Australia (VK6) - but no mention of a QLD (VK4) licence.

You can Google information about these frequencies and some of the studies about them - they do form part of the cosmic radiation so nothing special about them - albeit they are usefully for cancer treatment in controlled exposures.

Cosmic radiation covers the spectrum at what we call frequencies ranging from "daylight to dark" - which simply means the range of frequencies present in the radiation from the Sun go from the lowest end of the spectrum at the longest wavelength to the high end of the spectrum at the shortest wave length.

If you take strong "sunlight" it can be measured to around 1 thousand watts per square meter of "irradiance" - in other words it is very "bright light".

If you analyse the "sunlight" you will find that around 500 >< watts is in the infrared spectrum - about 450 >< watts is what we actually see (visible light - and this is what you friend is talking about with the mention of 350 watts/sq m) - my studies were more focused on the lower wattage range around 32 >< watts - which is of course the ultraviolet range  - so when I studied the effects of the various frequencies it was to ascertain the effect on the ionosphere in regard to the way the cosmic radiation in effect made the ionosphere more dense and a suitable "reflector" of the radio wave. The side benefit was discovering the way it also caused heating of the atmosphere - this being a by product of the wat certain amounts were either absorded or emitted - when the normal absorption emmission was changed by increased solar activity (producing the higher level EUV) we had accelerated warming - when the EUV reduced we had a reduction in heating.

One of the biggest problems has been the relatively short term of data collection that we have - we have to rely heavily on ice core sampling to give us an expanded time frame but we cannot rely on it because we know the ice cores are not in fact a true recovery because we really do not know precisely how much ice has already melted  - so it has been what is termed "inexact science" complimented by some "educated guesswork"

Wavelength is usually given in meters which is more easily understood - ie people tune their radios to the "40m" band or the "2m" band - then once we get above that we go to centimeters such as he mentioned "70cm"  and then "23cm" - once we get shorter than 23cm we usually switch to speaking in MHz (MegaHertz) we can of course use the MHz. designation for any wavelength up to where we change to GigaHertz - for example if you were watching satellite TV you would most likely be translating a signal of 2.4 gigahertz.

My studies led me to eventually concentrate mainly on the spectrum at the UV (ultraviolet) and EUV (extreme ultraviolet) frequencies - it is these frequencies that have a very pronounced effect on the atmosphere of our planet - it is their specific "nuclear reaction" with the nitrogen atom that is most important.

Now your friend asks you about "bending/slowing" - well the fact is all light can be bent and it is as it enters the planets atmosphere - it is passing from a medium with very little density into a far more dense medium - some of the spectrum will proceed with deflection while a great deal of it is refracted. That is simple high school physics - you probably did some basic experiments with crystals and prisms and mirrors to demonstrate that light does not nescessarily travel in straight lines.

Out in space the cosmic radiation is spiralling outward because of the rotation of the Sun and the effects of mass attraction (gravity).

Astronomy makes use of the infrared spectrum to form images of distant planets etc.

Ok hope that helps a bit Jan.

Your friend would be better off helping you learn instead of trying to big note himself.

Stay safe and keep well mate.

Love and hugs from all of us.

Kev.


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muso
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Re: A theory to watch, will destroy the global warming
Reply #29 - Feb 27th, 2012 at 3:38pm
 
Quote:
You can Google information about these frequencies and some of the studies about them - they do form part of the cosmic radiation so nothing special about them - albeit they are usefully for cancer treatment in controlled exposures.


er no. 10-15 microns is actually infrared as I said previously. Most of the "cosmic radiation" is not actually electromagnetic radiation at all, with the exception of x-rays and gamma radiation. X-rays have a wavelength measured in nanometres or sub nanometres.

Quote:
If you analyse the "sunlight" you will find that around 500 >< watts is in the infrared spectrum - about 450 >< watts is what we actually see (visible light - and this is what you friend is talking about with the mention of 350 watts/sq m)


Oh boy- Worse than I thought. He's a looney or he's suffering from advanced Alzheimers.  I think he means nanometres.

I'll have a look at his website if I get a chance. If that was a sample of his "knowledge" I hate to think what's on there. Maybe this site would be interested in featuring it:

http://www.crank.net/

I'll refer it if it's funny enough.
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