The truth about CO2 and climate change

Opinions are like assholes, everybody has one. Congratulations, asshole. What your response tells us is that you don't subscribe to the scientific method. And that puts your posts squarely outside of the purview of these conversations, since we are talking about science, not skullduggery.

Cheers,
oh contrare. I swear by the science. I say the sciece says that adding 120 PPM of CO2 to the atmosphere does nothing to temperatures. Prove me wrong!!!!!! I have the experiment in 1901 Herr Koch, give me one from your argument. Oh that's right, you can't. yet, you just want us all to believe in ghosts and gobblins

RealClimate A Saturated Gassy Argument

Some people have been arguing that simple physics shows there is already so much CO2 in the air that its effect on infrared radiation is "saturated"— meaning that adding more gas can make scarcely any difference in how much radiation gets through the atmosphere, since all the radiation is already blocked. And besides, isn’t water vapor already blocking all the infrared rays that CO2 ever would?

The arguments do sound good, so good that in fact they helped to suppress research on the greenhouse effect for half a century. In 1900, shortly after Svante Arrhenius published his pathbreaking argument that our use of fossil fuels will eventually warm the planet, another scientist, Knut Ångström, asked an assistant, Herr J. Koch, to do a simple experiment. He sent infrared radiation through a tube filled with carbon dioxide, containing somewhat less gas in total then would be found in a column of air reaching to the top of the atmosphere. That’s not much, since the concentration in air is only a few hundred parts per million. Herr Koch did his experiments in a 30cm long tube, though 250cm would have been closer to the right length to use to represent the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. Herr Koch reported that when he cut the amount of gas in the tube by one-third, the amount of radiation that got through scarcely changed. The American meteorological community was alerted to Ångström’s result in a commentary appearing in the June, 1901 issue of Monthly Weather Review, which used the result to caution "geologists" against adhering to Arrhenius’ wild ideas.

Still more persuasive to scientists of the day was the fact that water vapor, which is far more abundant in the air than carbon dioxide, also intercepts infrared radiation. In the infrared spectrum, the main bands where each gas blocked radiation overlapped one another. How could adding CO2 affect radiation in bands of the spectrum that H2O (not to mention CO2 itself) already made opaque? As these ideas spread, even scientists who had been enthusiastic about Arrhenius’s work decided it was in error. Work on the question stagnated. If there was ever an “establishment” view about the greenhouse effect, it was confidence that the CO2 emitted by humans could not affect anything so grand as the Earth’s climate.

Nobody was interested in thinking about the matter deeply enough to notice the flaw in the argument. The scientists were looking at warming from ground level, so to speak, asking about the radiation that reaches and leaves the surface of the Earth. Like Ångström, they tended to treat the atmosphere overhead as a unit, as if it were a single sheet of glass. (Thus the “greenhouse” analogy.) But this is not how global warming actually works.

What happens to infrared radiation emitted by the Earth’s surface? As it moves up layer by layer through the atmosphere, some is stopped in each layer. To be specific: a molecule of carbon dioxide, water vapor or some other greenhouse gas absorbs a bit of energy from the radiation. The molecule may radiate the energy back out again in a random direction. Or it may transfer the energy into velocity in collisions with other air molecules, so that the layer of air where it sits gets warmer. The layer of air radiates some of the energy it has absorbed back toward the ground, and some upwards to higher layers. As you go higher, the atmosphere gets thinner and colder. Eventually the energy reaches a layer so thin that radiation can escape into space.

What happens if we add more carbon dioxide? In the layers so high and thin that much of the heat radiation from lower down slips through, adding more greenhouse gas molecules means the layer will absorb more of the rays. So the place from which most of the heat energy finally leaves the Earth will shift to higher layers. Those are colder layers, so they do not radiate heat as well. The planet as a whole is now taking in more energy than it radiates (which is in fact our current situation). As the higher levels radiate some of the excess downwards, all the lower levels down to the surface warm up. The imbalance must continue until the high levels get hot enough to radiate as much energy back out as the planet is receiving.

Any saturation at lower levels would not change this, since it is the layers from which radiation does escape that determine the planet’s heat balance. The basic logic was neatly explained by John Tyndall back in 1862: "As a dam built across a river causes a local deepening of the stream, so our atmosphere, thrown as a barrier across the terrestrial [infrared] rays, produces a local heightening of the temperature at the Earth’s surface."

Even a simple explanation can be hard to grasp in all its implications, and scientists only worked those out piecewise. First they had to understand that it was worth the trouble to think about carbon dioxide at all. Didn’t the fact that water vapor thoroughly blocks infrared radiation mean that any changes in CO2 are meaningless? Again, the scientists of the day got caught in the trap of thinking of the atmosphere as a single slab. Although they knew that the higher you went, the drier the air got, they only considered the total water vapor in the column.

The breakthroughs that finally set the field back on the right track came from research during the 1940s. Military officers lavishly funded research on the high layers of the air where their bombers operated, layers traversed by the infrared radiation they might use to detect enemies. Theoretical analysis of absorption leaped forward, with results confirmed by laboratory studies using techniques orders of magnitude better than Ångström could deploy. The resulting developments stimulated new and clearer thinking about atmospheric radiation.

Among other things, the new studies showed that in the frigid and rarified upper atmosphere where the crucial infrared absorption takes place, the nature of the absorption is different from what scientists had assumed from the old sea-level measurements. Take a single molecule of CO2 or H2O. It will absorb light only in a set of specific wavelengths, which show up as thin dark lines in a spectrum. In a gas at sea-level temperature and pressure, the countless molecules colliding with one another at different velocities each absorb at slightly different wavelengths, so the lines are broadened and overlap to a considerable extent. Even at sea level pressure, the absorption is concentrated into discrete spikes, but the gaps between the spikes are fairly narrow and the "valleys" between the spikes are not terribly deep. (see Part II) None of this was known a century ago. With the primitive infrared instruments available in the early 20th century, scientists saw the absorption smeared out into wide bands. And they had no theory to suggest anything different.
Measurements done for the US Air Force drew scientists’ attention to the details of the absorption, and especially at high altitudes. At low pressure the spikes become much more sharply defined, like a picket fence. There are gaps between the H2O lines where radiation can get through unless blocked by CO2 lines. Moreover, researchers had become acutely aware of how very dry the air gets at upper altitudes — indeed the stratosphere has scarcely any water vapor at all. By contrast, CO2 is well mixed all through the atmosphere, so as you look higher it becomes relatively more significant. The main points could have been understood already in the 1930s if scientists had looked at the greenhouse effect closely (in fact one physicist, E.O. Hulbert, did make a pretty good calculation, but the matter was of so little interest that nobody noticed.)

As we have seen, in the higher layers where radiation starts to slip through easily, adding some greenhouse gas must warm the Earth regardless of how the absorption works. The changes in the H2O and CO2 absorption lines with pressure and temperature only shift the layers where the main action takes place. You do need to take it all into account to make an exact calculation of the warming. In the 1950s, after good infrared data and digital computers became available, the physicist Gilbert Plass took time off from what seemed like more important research to work through lengthy calculations of the radiation balance, layer by layer in the atmosphere and point by point in the spectrum. He announced that adding CO2 really could cause a degree or so of global warming. Plass’s calculations were too primitive to account for many important effects. (Heat energy moves up not only by radiation but by convection, some radiation is blocked not by gas but by clouds, etc.) But for the few scientists who paid attention, it was now clear that the question was worth studying. Decades more would pass before scientists began to give the public a clear explanation of what was really going on in these calculations, drawing attention to the high, cold layers of the atmosphere. Even today, many popularizers try to explain the greenhouse effect as if the atmosphere were a single sheet of glass.

To so summarize:

So, if a skeptical friend hits you with the "saturation argument" against global warming, here’s all you need to say: (a) You’d still get an increase in greenhouse warming even if the atmosphere were saturated, because it’s the absorption in the thin upper atmosphere (which is unsaturated) that counts (b) It’s not even true that the atmosphere is actually saturated with respect to absorption by CO2, (c) Water vapor doesn’t overwhelm the effects of CO2 because there’s little water vapor in the high, cold regions from which infrared escapes, and at the low pressures there water vapor absorption is like a leaky sieve, which would let a lot more radiation through were it not for CO2, and (d) These issues were satisfactorily addressed by physicists 50 years ago, and the necessary physics is included in all climate models.
Then you can heave a sigh, and wonder how much different the world would be today if these arguments were understood in the 1920′s, as they could well have been if anybody had thought it important enough to think through.

And finally, if you actually swore by science, you would have made an effort to keep up to date by reading current periodicals or at a minimum, taken a friggin class above the elementary school level post-WWI.
and yet from the same document:
"
The arguments do sound good, so good that in fact they helped to suppress research on the greenhouse effect for half a century. In 1900, shortly after Svante Arrhenius published his pathbreaking argument that our use of fossil fuels will eventually warm the planet, another scientist, Knut Ångström, asked an assistant, Herr J. Koch, to do a simple experiment. He sent infrared radiation through a tube filled with carbon dioxide, containing somewhat less gas in total then would be found in a column of air reaching to the top of the atmosphere. That’s not much, since the concentration in air is only a few hundred parts per million. Herr Koch did his experiments in a 30cm long tube, though 250cm would have been closer to the right length to use to represent the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. Herr Koch reported that when he cut the amount of gas in the tube by one-third, the amount of radiation that got through scarcely changed. The American meteorological community was alerted to Ångström’s result in a commentary appearing in the June, 1901 issue of Monthly Weather Review, which used the result to caution "geologists" against adhering to Arrhenius’ wild ideas.
"

Dufus, read what comes after. Jeez.
So I'm glad you agree, that for the most part, the entire debate is over. The fact is that saturation happens and proved in that document as you and I point out. So what's the problem?

The problem is that you pulled one paragraph from the beginning of the article, and ignored everything that came after (i.e., the part that explained why Herr Koch's claim was bullshit). What scientifically literate person (as you claim to be) does that?
 
oh contrare. I swear by the science. I say the sciece says that adding 120 PPM of CO2 to the atmosphere does nothing to temperatures. Prove me wrong!!!!!! I have the experiment in 1901 Herr Koch, give me one from your argument. Oh that's right, you can't. yet, you just want us all to believe in ghosts and gobblins

RealClimate A Saturated Gassy Argument

Some people have been arguing that simple physics shows there is already so much CO2 in the air that its effect on infrared radiation is "saturated"— meaning that adding more gas can make scarcely any difference in how much radiation gets through the atmosphere, since all the radiation is already blocked. And besides, isn’t water vapor already blocking all the infrared rays that CO2 ever would?

The arguments do sound good, so good that in fact they helped to suppress research on the greenhouse effect for half a century. In 1900, shortly after Svante Arrhenius published his pathbreaking argument that our use of fossil fuels will eventually warm the planet, another scientist, Knut Ångström, asked an assistant, Herr J. Koch, to do a simple experiment. He sent infrared radiation through a tube filled with carbon dioxide, containing somewhat less gas in total then would be found in a column of air reaching to the top of the atmosphere. That’s not much, since the concentration in air is only a few hundred parts per million. Herr Koch did his experiments in a 30cm long tube, though 250cm would have been closer to the right length to use to represent the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. Herr Koch reported that when he cut the amount of gas in the tube by one-third, the amount of radiation that got through scarcely changed. The American meteorological community was alerted to Ångström’s result in a commentary appearing in the June, 1901 issue of Monthly Weather Review, which used the result to caution "geologists" against adhering to Arrhenius’ wild ideas.

Still more persuasive to scientists of the day was the fact that water vapor, which is far more abundant in the air than carbon dioxide, also intercepts infrared radiation. In the infrared spectrum, the main bands where each gas blocked radiation overlapped one another. How could adding CO2 affect radiation in bands of the spectrum that H2O (not to mention CO2 itself) already made opaque? As these ideas spread, even scientists who had been enthusiastic about Arrhenius’s work decided it was in error. Work on the question stagnated. If there was ever an “establishment” view about the greenhouse effect, it was confidence that the CO2 emitted by humans could not affect anything so grand as the Earth’s climate.

Nobody was interested in thinking about the matter deeply enough to notice the flaw in the argument. The scientists were looking at warming from ground level, so to speak, asking about the radiation that reaches and leaves the surface of the Earth. Like Ångström, they tended to treat the atmosphere overhead as a unit, as if it were a single sheet of glass. (Thus the “greenhouse” analogy.) But this is not how global warming actually works.

What happens to infrared radiation emitted by the Earth’s surface? As it moves up layer by layer through the atmosphere, some is stopped in each layer. To be specific: a molecule of carbon dioxide, water vapor or some other greenhouse gas absorbs a bit of energy from the radiation. The molecule may radiate the energy back out again in a random direction. Or it may transfer the energy into velocity in collisions with other air molecules, so that the layer of air where it sits gets warmer. The layer of air radiates some of the energy it has absorbed back toward the ground, and some upwards to higher layers. As you go higher, the atmosphere gets thinner and colder. Eventually the energy reaches a layer so thin that radiation can escape into space.

What happens if we add more carbon dioxide? In the layers so high and thin that much of the heat radiation from lower down slips through, adding more greenhouse gas molecules means the layer will absorb more of the rays. So the place from which most of the heat energy finally leaves the Earth will shift to higher layers. Those are colder layers, so they do not radiate heat as well. The planet as a whole is now taking in more energy than it radiates (which is in fact our current situation). As the higher levels radiate some of the excess downwards, all the lower levels down to the surface warm up. The imbalance must continue until the high levels get hot enough to radiate as much energy back out as the planet is receiving.

Any saturation at lower levels would not change this, since it is the layers from which radiation does escape that determine the planet’s heat balance. The basic logic was neatly explained by John Tyndall back in 1862: "As a dam built across a river causes a local deepening of the stream, so our atmosphere, thrown as a barrier across the terrestrial [infrared] rays, produces a local heightening of the temperature at the Earth’s surface."

Even a simple explanation can be hard to grasp in all its implications, and scientists only worked those out piecewise. First they had to understand that it was worth the trouble to think about carbon dioxide at all. Didn’t the fact that water vapor thoroughly blocks infrared radiation mean that any changes in CO2 are meaningless? Again, the scientists of the day got caught in the trap of thinking of the atmosphere as a single slab. Although they knew that the higher you went, the drier the air got, they only considered the total water vapor in the column.

The breakthroughs that finally set the field back on the right track came from research during the 1940s. Military officers lavishly funded research on the high layers of the air where their bombers operated, layers traversed by the infrared radiation they might use to detect enemies. Theoretical analysis of absorption leaped forward, with results confirmed by laboratory studies using techniques orders of magnitude better than Ångström could deploy. The resulting developments stimulated new and clearer thinking about atmospheric radiation.

Among other things, the new studies showed that in the frigid and rarified upper atmosphere where the crucial infrared absorption takes place, the nature of the absorption is different from what scientists had assumed from the old sea-level measurements. Take a single molecule of CO2 or H2O. It will absorb light only in a set of specific wavelengths, which show up as thin dark lines in a spectrum. In a gas at sea-level temperature and pressure, the countless molecules colliding with one another at different velocities each absorb at slightly different wavelengths, so the lines are broadened and overlap to a considerable extent. Even at sea level pressure, the absorption is concentrated into discrete spikes, but the gaps between the spikes are fairly narrow and the "valleys" between the spikes are not terribly deep. (see Part II) None of this was known a century ago. With the primitive infrared instruments available in the early 20th century, scientists saw the absorption smeared out into wide bands. And they had no theory to suggest anything different.
Measurements done for the US Air Force drew scientists’ attention to the details of the absorption, and especially at high altitudes. At low pressure the spikes become much more sharply defined, like a picket fence. There are gaps between the H2O lines where radiation can get through unless blocked by CO2 lines. Moreover, researchers had become acutely aware of how very dry the air gets at upper altitudes — indeed the stratosphere has scarcely any water vapor at all. By contrast, CO2 is well mixed all through the atmosphere, so as you look higher it becomes relatively more significant. The main points could have been understood already in the 1930s if scientists had looked at the greenhouse effect closely (in fact one physicist, E.O. Hulbert, did make a pretty good calculation, but the matter was of so little interest that nobody noticed.)

As we have seen, in the higher layers where radiation starts to slip through easily, adding some greenhouse gas must warm the Earth regardless of how the absorption works. The changes in the H2O and CO2 absorption lines with pressure and temperature only shift the layers where the main action takes place. You do need to take it all into account to make an exact calculation of the warming. In the 1950s, after good infrared data and digital computers became available, the physicist Gilbert Plass took time off from what seemed like more important research to work through lengthy calculations of the radiation balance, layer by layer in the atmosphere and point by point in the spectrum. He announced that adding CO2 really could cause a degree or so of global warming. Plass’s calculations were too primitive to account for many important effects. (Heat energy moves up not only by radiation but by convection, some radiation is blocked not by gas but by clouds, etc.) But for the few scientists who paid attention, it was now clear that the question was worth studying. Decades more would pass before scientists began to give the public a clear explanation of what was really going on in these calculations, drawing attention to the high, cold layers of the atmosphere. Even today, many popularizers try to explain the greenhouse effect as if the atmosphere were a single sheet of glass.

To so summarize:

So, if a skeptical friend hits you with the "saturation argument" against global warming, here’s all you need to say: (a) You’d still get an increase in greenhouse warming even if the atmosphere were saturated, because it’s the absorption in the thin upper atmosphere (which is unsaturated) that counts (b) It’s not even true that the atmosphere is actually saturated with respect to absorption by CO2, (c) Water vapor doesn’t overwhelm the effects of CO2 because there’s little water vapor in the high, cold regions from which infrared escapes, and at the low pressures there water vapor absorption is like a leaky sieve, which would let a lot more radiation through were it not for CO2, and (d) These issues were satisfactorily addressed by physicists 50 years ago, and the necessary physics is included in all climate models.
Then you can heave a sigh, and wonder how much different the world would be today if these arguments were understood in the 1920′s, as they could well have been if anybody had thought it important enough to think through.

And finally, if you actually swore by science, you would have made an effort to keep up to date by reading current periodicals or at a minimum, taken a friggin class above the elementary school level post-WWI.
and yet from the same document:
"
The arguments do sound good, so good that in fact they helped to suppress research on the greenhouse effect for half a century. In 1900, shortly after Svante Arrhenius published his pathbreaking argument that our use of fossil fuels will eventually warm the planet, another scientist, Knut Ångström, asked an assistant, Herr J. Koch, to do a simple experiment. He sent infrared radiation through a tube filled with carbon dioxide, containing somewhat less gas in total then would be found in a column of air reaching to the top of the atmosphere. That’s not much, since the concentration in air is only a few hundred parts per million. Herr Koch did his experiments in a 30cm long tube, though 250cm would have been closer to the right length to use to represent the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. Herr Koch reported that when he cut the amount of gas in the tube by one-third, the amount of radiation that got through scarcely changed. The American meteorological community was alerted to Ångström’s result in a commentary appearing in the June, 1901 issue of Monthly Weather Review, which used the result to caution "geologists" against adhering to Arrhenius’ wild ideas.
"

Dufus, read what comes after. Jeez.
So I'm glad you agree, that for the most part, the entire debate is over. The fact is that saturation happens and proved in that document as you and I point out. So what's the problem?

The problem is that you pulled one paragraph from the beginning of the article, and ignored everything that came after (i.e., the part that explained why Herr Koch's claim was bullshit). What scientifically literate person (as you claim to be) does that?
none of the rest disproved the experiment! Seems to me if they truly believed the experiment was in error, repeat the experiment. Nope, made some statements moved the agument to water vapor and alas, the goalposts moved.
 
jc, in full view of everyone, you ran from the data that destroys your bullshit pseudoscience.

Honest people don't have to run from the science. You do. 'Nuff said.

Think about it. Do you really want to spend the rest of your life choosing to lie on behalf of your cult? And it's not like you're fooling anyone. If anything, you're making people think you're part of a liars' cult. So why keep humiliating yourself?
 
RealClimate A Saturated Gassy Argument

To so summarize:

And finally, if you actually swore by science, you would have made an effort to keep up to date by reading current periodicals or at a minimum, taken a friggin class above the elementary school level post-WWI.
and yet from the same document:
"
The arguments do sound good, so good that in fact they helped to suppress research on the greenhouse effect for half a century. In 1900, shortly after Svante Arrhenius published his pathbreaking argument that our use of fossil fuels will eventually warm the planet, another scientist, Knut Ångström, asked an assistant, Herr J. Koch, to do a simple experiment. He sent infrared radiation through a tube filled with carbon dioxide, containing somewhat less gas in total then would be found in a column of air reaching to the top of the atmosphere. That’s not much, since the concentration in air is only a few hundred parts per million. Herr Koch did his experiments in a 30cm long tube, though 250cm would have been closer to the right length to use to represent the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. Herr Koch reported that when he cut the amount of gas in the tube by one-third, the amount of radiation that got through scarcely changed. The American meteorological community was alerted to Ångström’s result in a commentary appearing in the June, 1901 issue of Monthly Weather Review, which used the result to caution "geologists" against adhering to Arrhenius’ wild ideas.
"

Dufus, read what comes after. Jeez.
So I'm glad you agree, that for the most part, the entire debate is over. The fact is that saturation happens and proved in that document as you and I point out. So what's the problem?

The problem is that you pulled one paragraph from the beginning of the article, and ignored everything that came after (i.e., the part that explained why Herr Koch's claim was bullshit). What scientifically literate person (as you claim to be) does that?
none of the rest disproved the experiment! Seems to me if they truly believed the experiment was in error, repeat the experiment. Nope, made some statements moved the agument to water vapor and alas, the goalposts moved.

It shows that Koch's experiment is irrelevant to the action of CO2 in the atmosphere.

Explain this:

 
jc, in full view of everyone, you ran from the data that destroys your bullshit pseudoscience.

Honest people don't have to run from the science. You do. 'Nuff said.

Think about it. Do you really want to spend the rest of your life choosing to lie on behalf of your cult? And it's not like you're fooling anyone. If anything, you're making people think you're part of a liars' cult. So why keep humiliating yourself?
What is that you state is my lie?
 
and yet from the same document:
"
The arguments do sound good, so good that in fact they helped to suppress research on the greenhouse effect for half a century. In 1900, shortly after Svante Arrhenius published his pathbreaking argument that our use of fossil fuels will eventually warm the planet, another scientist, Knut Ångström, asked an assistant, Herr J. Koch, to do a simple experiment. He sent infrared radiation through a tube filled with carbon dioxide, containing somewhat less gas in total then would be found in a column of air reaching to the top of the atmosphere. That’s not much, since the concentration in air is only a few hundred parts per million. Herr Koch did his experiments in a 30cm long tube, though 250cm would have been closer to the right length to use to represent the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. Herr Koch reported that when he cut the amount of gas in the tube by one-third, the amount of radiation that got through scarcely changed. The American meteorological community was alerted to Ångström’s result in a commentary appearing in the June, 1901 issue of Monthly Weather Review, which used the result to caution "geologists" against adhering to Arrhenius’ wild ideas.
"

Dufus, read what comes after. Jeez.
So I'm glad you agree, that for the most part, the entire debate is over. The fact is that saturation happens and proved in that document as you and I point out. So what's the problem?

The problem is that you pulled one paragraph from the beginning of the article, and ignored everything that came after (i.e., the part that explained why Herr Koch's claim was bullshit). What scientifically literate person (as you claim to be) does that?
none of the rest disproved the experiment! Seems to me if they truly believed the experiment was in error, repeat the experiment. Nope, made some statements moved the agument to water vapor and alas, the goalposts moved.

It shows that Koch's experiment is irrelevant to the action of CO2 in the atmosphere.

Explain this:


Holy crap batman, what the 'f' is that. See it get's hotter in the northern hemisphere because of the shift in axis of the earth, not because of CO2. I'm sorry, I find that video anything but evidence of something other than a kiddie show.

Here is a link, go read it...

David Archibald.
 
jc, in full view of everyone, you ran from the data that destroys your bullshit pseudoscience.

Honest people don't have to run from the science. You do. 'Nuff said.

Think about it. Do you really want to spend the rest of your life choosing to lie on behalf of your cult? And it's not like you're fooling anyone. If anything, you're making people think you're part of a liars' cult. So why keep humiliating yourself?
What is that you state is my lie?

That Koch's experiment disproves global warming, among other lies.
 
Dufus, read what comes after. Jeez.
So I'm glad you agree, that for the most part, the entire debate is over. The fact is that saturation happens and proved in that document as you and I point out. So what's the problem?

The problem is that you pulled one paragraph from the beginning of the article, and ignored everything that came after (i.e., the part that explained why Herr Koch's claim was bullshit). What scientifically literate person (as you claim to be) does that?
none of the rest disproved the experiment! Seems to me if they truly believed the experiment was in error, repeat the experiment. Nope, made some statements moved the agument to water vapor and alas, the goalposts moved.

It shows that Koch's experiment is irrelevant to the action of CO2 in the atmosphere.

Explain this:


Holy crap batman, what the 'f' is that. See it get's hotter in the northern hemisphere because of the shift in axis of the earth, not because of CO2. I'm sorry, I find that video anything but evidence of something other than a kiddie show.

Here is a link, go read it...

David Archibald.


I didn't expect you to understand that video. See, in order to have that capability, you must first have a brain, then have the ability to use it, and then, have some minimal science training to understand the big words. You fail utterly in all categories. Poor miserable you.
 
he arguments do sound good, so good that in fact they helped to suppress research on the greenhouse effect for half a century. In 1900, shortly after Svante Arrhenius published his pathbreaking argument that our use of fossil fuels will eventually warm the planet, another scientist, Knut Ångström, asked an assistant, Herr J. Koch, to do a simple experiment. He sent infrared radiation through a tube filled with carbon dioxide, containing somewhat less gas in total then would be found in a column of air reaching to the top of the atmosphere. That’s not much, since the concentration in air is only a few hundred parts per million. Herr Koch did his experiments in a 30cm long tube, though 250cm would have been closer to the right length to use to represent the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. Herr Koch reported that when he cut the amount of gas in the tube by one-third, the amount of radiation that got through scarcely changed. The American meteorological community was alerted to Ångström’s result in a commentary appearing in the June, 1901 issue of Monthly Weather Review, which used the result to caution "geologists" against adhering to Arrhenius’ wild ideas.

Good God, JC, the sentence in red alone invalidates the whole experiment. That was supremely sloppy work.
"
 
he arguments do sound good, so good that in fact they helped to suppress research on the greenhouse effect for half a century. In 1900, shortly after Svante Arrhenius published his pathbreaking argument that our use of fossil fuels will eventually warm the planet, another scientist, Knut Ångström, asked an assistant, Herr J. Koch, to do a simple experiment. He sent infrared radiation through a tube filled with carbon dioxide, containing somewhat less gas in total then would be found in a column of air reaching to the top of the atmosphere. That’s not much, since the concentration in air is only a few hundred parts per million. Herr Koch did his experiments in a 30cm long tube, though 250cm would have been closer to the right length to use to represent the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere. Herr Koch reported that when he cut the amount of gas in the tube by one-third, the amount of radiation that got through scarcely changed. The American meteorological community was alerted to Ångström’s result in a commentary appearing in the June, 1901 issue of Monthly Weather Review, which used the result to caution "geologists" against adhering to Arrhenius’ wild ideas.

Good God, JC, the sentence in red alone invalidates the whole experiment. That was supremely sloppy work.
"
oh gawd, everyday and you still lose. it says would have been closer, but it doesn't say it was wrong. So again ....FAIL..................WiNNiNg everyday on here. Me, the nonscientist, and they can't beat me.
 
So I'm glad you agree, that for the most part, the entire debate is over. The fact is that saturation happens and proved in that document as you and I point out. So what's the problem?

The problem is that you pulled one paragraph from the beginning of the article, and ignored everything that came after (i.e., the part that explained why Herr Koch's claim was bullshit). What scientifically literate person (as you claim to be) does that?
none of the rest disproved the experiment! Seems to me if they truly believed the experiment was in error, repeat the experiment. Nope, made some statements moved the agument to water vapor and alas, the goalposts moved.

It shows that Koch's experiment is irrelevant to the action of CO2 in the atmosphere.

Explain this:


Holy crap batman, what the 'f' is that. See it get's hotter in the northern hemisphere because of the shift in axis of the earth, not because of CO2. I'm sorry, I find that video anything but evidence of something other than a kiddie show.

Here is a link, go read it...

David Archibald.


I didn't expect you to understand that video. See, in order to have that capability, you must first have a brain, then have the ability to use it, and then, have some minimal science training to understand the big words. You fail utterly in all categories. Poor miserable you.

yeah because it is something made while on crack. Me personally don't use the stuff so it would be hard for me to grasp its intent. Which you don't even know.
 
The problem is that you pulled one paragraph from the beginning of the article, and ignored everything that came after (i.e., the part that explained why Herr Koch's claim was bullshit). What scientifically literate person (as you claim to be) does that?
none of the rest disproved the experiment! Seems to me if they truly believed the experiment was in error, repeat the experiment. Nope, made some statements moved the agument to water vapor and alas, the goalposts moved.

It shows that Koch's experiment is irrelevant to the action of CO2 in the atmosphere.

Explain this:


Holy crap batman, what the 'f' is that. See it get's hotter in the northern hemisphere because of the shift in axis of the earth, not because of CO2. I'm sorry, I find that video anything but evidence of something other than a kiddie show.

Here is a link, go read it...

David Archibald.


I didn't expect you to understand that video. See, in order to have that capability, you must first have a brain, then have the ability to use it, and then, have some minimal science training to understand the big words. You fail utterly in all categories. Poor miserable you.

yeah because it is something made while on crack. Me personally don't use the stuff so it would be hard for me to grasp its intent. Which you don't even know.


I am quite certain you would know more about crack than I do. Though it does explain your responses. Here's some friendly advice for you -


Crisis management.

You need it.
 
none of the rest disproved the experiment! Seems to me if they truly believed the experiment was in error, repeat the experiment. Nope, made some statements moved the agument to water vapor and alas, the goalposts moved.

It shows that Koch's experiment is irrelevant to the action of CO2 in the atmosphere.

Explain this:


Holy crap batman, what the 'f' is that. See it get's hotter in the northern hemisphere because of the shift in axis of the earth, not because of CO2. I'm sorry, I find that video anything but evidence of something other than a kiddie show.

Here is a link, go read it...

David Archibald.


I didn't expect you to understand that video. See, in order to have that capability, you must first have a brain, then have the ability to use it, and then, have some minimal science training to understand the big words. You fail utterly in all categories. Poor miserable you.

yeah because it is something made while on crack. Me personally don't use the stuff so it would be hard for me to grasp its intent. Which you don't even know.


I am quite certain you would know more about crack than I do. Though it does explain your responses. Here's some friendly advice for you -


Crisis management.

You need it.

no worries you're not certain of anything.
 
It shows that Koch's experiment is irrelevant to the action of CO2 in the atmosphere.

Explain this:


Holy crap batman, what the 'f' is that. See it get's hotter in the northern hemisphere because of the shift in axis of the earth, not because of CO2. I'm sorry, I find that video anything but evidence of something other than a kiddie show.

Here is a link, go read it...

David Archibald.


I didn't expect you to understand that video. See, in order to have that capability, you must first have a brain, then have the ability to use it, and then, have some minimal science training to understand the big words. You fail utterly in all categories. Poor miserable you.

yeah because it is something made while on crack. Me personally don't use the stuff so it would be hard for me to grasp its intent. Which you don't even know.


I am quite certain you would know more about crack than I do. Though it does explain your responses. Here's some friendly advice for you -


Crisis management.

You need it.

no worries you're not certain of anything.


I am pretty certain of the laws of physics. How about yourself?
 
Holy crap batman, what the 'f' is that. See it get's hotter in the northern hemisphere because of the shift in axis of the earth, not because of CO2. I'm sorry, I find that video anything but evidence of something other than a kiddie show.

Here is a link, go read it...

David Archibald.

I didn't expect you to understand that video. See, in order to have that capability, you must first have a brain, then have the ability to use it, and then, have some minimal science training to understand the big words. You fail utterly in all categories. Poor miserable you.
yeah because it is something made while on crack. Me personally don't use the stuff so it would be hard for me to grasp its intent. Which you don't even know.

I am quite certain you would know more about crack than I do. Though it does explain your responses. Here's some friendly advice for you -


Crisis management.

You need it.
no worries you're not certain of anything.

I am pretty certain of the laws of physics. How about yourself?


record cold temps all over the world this week. Global warming is real.
 
I didn't expect you to understand that video. See, in order to have that capability, you must first have a brain, then have the ability to use it, and then, have some minimal science training to understand the big words. You fail utterly in all categories. Poor miserable you.
yeah because it is something made while on crack. Me personally don't use the stuff so it would be hard for me to grasp its intent. Which you don't even know.

I am quite certain you would know more about crack than I do. Though it does explain your responses. Here's some friendly advice for you -


Crisis management.

You need it.
no worries you're not certain of anything.

I am pretty certain of the laws of physics. How about yourself?


record cold temps all over the world this week. Global warming is real.

Really? You really want to argue about the weather and call it climate? Facepalm, dude.
 
fishy
record cold temps all over the world this week. Global warming is real
.............................................................................................................................

Well fishy, all over the world?

Heat Wave Continues for Brazil Paraguay Bolivia

Southern Brazil, Paraguay and Bolivia remain in the midst of a baking and, for some, record heat wave.

Temperatures in southern Brazil, Paraguay and Bolivia will continue to soar 6 to 12 C (10 to 20 F) above normal through Saturday as cooling thunderstorms remain absent.

This includes in Asuncion in Paraguay, Santa Cruz de la Sierra in Bolivia and Sao Paulo in Brazil. Rio de Janeiro will heat up this weekend.
 
Cookies must be enabled. The Australian

TEMPERATURES are forecast to reach 38C in Sydney today, and up to 40C in the west, as NSW braces itself for the sweltering heat.


The mercury had already soared past 30C in the CBD by 9am in what could be the hottest November day in four years. The average temperature for this time of year is 25C.

Severe fire danger warnings have been issued for the greater Sydney region, north western and central ranges, upper central west plains and greater hunter.

Hmmmmmmmmm.............................
 

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