Tuesday 23rd of April 2024

of radiative forcing and global warming...

radiative forcing

Radiative forcing is a fundamental quantity for understanding both anthropogenic and natural changes in climate. It measures the extent to which human activities [such as the emission of carbon dioxide (CO2), see the image] and natural events (such as volcanic eruptions) perturb the flow of energy into and out of the climate system. This perturbation initiates all other changes of the climate in response to external forcings. Inconsistencies in the calculation of radiative forcing by CO2 introduce uncertainties in model projections of climate change, a problem that has persisted for more than two decades. The explicit calculation of radiative forcing and a careful vetting of radiative transfer parameterizations provide a straightforward means to substantially reduce these uncertainties and improve the projections.



Read more:
http://science.sciencemag.org/content/361/6400/326

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Reading the full article, one starts to ponder how the devil one goes about this. The problem of prediction via this kind of modelling still persists despite more and more data. I am in favour of simplicity and base my own flimsy models on empirical estimates extracted from past data (including Vostok). 

Because of politics, scientists need to produce a complicated formula to constraint the possibility of global warming in terms to what everyone can agree upon. The problem of “radiative forcing” has been raised by the denialist lobby with a vengeance. So the Paris agreement was set at less than 2 degrees Celsius with “reduction of emission of CO2 to match”, while considering the radiative forcing. In my book, this is politics, not science

As the full article points out: This limit should be established by a multimodel ensemble, but the corresponding range of allowable CO2 concentrations is unnecessary large because the ensemble does not consistently incorporate known and established physics that relate rising CO2 concentrations to radiative forcing...


Houston, we have a problem

Most of the models of global warming have not been implemented with accurate calculations of radiative forcing, because "it does not really matter" says Gus...

So what is radiative forcing?

Radiative forcing or climate forcing is the difference between insolation (sunlight) absorbed by the Earth and energy radiated back to space.

Simple, yet very complicated, because as the surface of the earth warms up under global warming condition, there is a possibility that more energy is radiated back to space. At which point is this going to balance out, and prevent the surface of the planet to warm up more? 

This is a bit like cooking with or without a lid on top of the saucepan.

It’s going to take longer and use more energy to achieve boiling point without a lid. At this stage, planet earth has a variety of lids that are at iffy-stiffy stage. Concentrations of radiatively active gases, commonly known as greenhouse gases, and aerosols can alter the forcing very quickly, and at which altitude are we going to see some influences that will interfere with our calculations. So new models are studying data from about 12 kilometres above the surface while others will study the forcing from the edge of the atmosphere. By knowing this energy lost and the energy gained we should be able to gauge the difference — i.e. global warming. 

Apparently, there has not been any progress for the last 25 years on assessing the energy lost (radiative forcing), and the climate sensitivity (global warming) is thus estimated as 1.5 to 4 degrees Celsius at the moment. 

This is why I do not try this caper. I have too little computing power in my head. But I can do better estimates. 

How much is radiative forcing increasing when the global temperature changes from 7 degrees Celsius (Ice ages) and 15 degrees Celsius (warmer climes)? This is a relative minor change of the earth surface temperature, yet important enough in its resulting status. But is the radiative forcing much different? My personal guess would be not much considering the actual temperature of space which is about 3 degrees K — cosmic background temperature, which is minus 455 degrees Fahrenheit or minus 270.45 Celsius.

This means we would have to consider a difference of running potential between 270 + 7 (cool) and 270 + 15 in normal warm condition which is 285 divided by 277 (cool) or around 0.102 per cent fluctuation. Is the forcing going to change much with an extra 4 degrees on the surface? the difference of running potential is 0.104. Not much difference. 

Even with a twelve degrees extra due to global warming, the difference is 0.1072. So when estimated such, the radiative forcing is going to be far less influential than the actual warming. And with the measured observations of the forcing being a bit all over the place (we know that atoms in the thermosphere oscillate between 500 and 2000 degrees Celsius), it would be a good idea to discount it for the plebs like us (and the politicians)— and keep this small interference in global warming between Chardonnay sipping specialists. 

No matter what, with an extra 110 ppm of CO2 above the natural setting of warm climate of 300 ppm, at this level we can estimate a MAJOR warming problem. 

At this stage we thus have to go back to the drawing board and find a reference point already established: with no CO2 in the atmosphere, the temperature of the surface of the earth would be minus 35 degrees Celsius.

This is our relative bottom limit. So with 180 ppm above this 0 level of CO2 we reach the glorious temperature (cool) of 42 degrees Celsius (35 + 7). With 300 ppm of CO2 we know we reach the temperature (warm) of 50 degrees above this (35 + 15). Extrapolate the next level of temperature with an extra 100+ anthropogenic ppm (400+) and the temperature is between 56 and 58 degrees above the minimum with no CO2 in the atmosphere. That is to say, with the amount of CO2 we ALREADY have added in the atmosphere, we are on the way to a BASIC temperature INCREASE of 6 to 8 degrees above our present average of 15 degrees (50 degrees Celsius above our atmosphere with zero CO2 [minus 35 degrees Celsius]). The radiative forcing would have a minimalist effect on these changes, as the radiative forcing influence has to be established from the minimum cosmic temperature.

There are many feedback mechanisms that are retarding the surface temperature increase, as well as other feedback mechanism that are pushing it up. Here we have to consider the melting of the ice sheets and glaciers all over the world that have a major impact in RETARDING the warming process. Important other factors which will increase the temperature are METHANE and NOx. 

Now the increase of radiative forcing is minimal compared to the POTENTIAL INCREASE of temperature. 

With the extra CO2 we’re going to let ourselves indulge in the next few years, my calculations tells me that the temperature will plateau at about 12 degrees Celsius on top of present temperatures, by around 2250. 


No kidding. And I could be wrong!


Gus Leonisky 

Your local former mathematician/accountant

Read also:
http://www.yourdemocracy.net.au/drupal/node/33287


Update: by 2032, the EXTRA anthropogenic and from disturbance to photosynthesis CO2 emissions are likely to reach 500 ppm. At this stage the potential warming will be around 12 degrees Celsius. Mitigating/retarding factors such as melting of ice-sheets will delay the onslaught, masking the true potential of increase warming yet the atmospheric perturbations could be catastrophic. See: wearing a beige cardigan on a hot day at the beach because mum said so...

 

By then, the rise of the oceans level will become highly noticeable to reach at least a metre on present levels by 2100.

son of a bitch...

son

of idiotic forcing and trumble neg...

Mr Abbott accused the Government of developing an emissions "obsession" and pushed for it to abandon the Paris agreement signed when he was in office.

Coalition MPs will discuss the NEG at a party room meeting tomorrow, after Federal Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg met with his state counterparts on Friday.

Business groups and industry groups have urged the Coalition to back the plan, saying it would lower power prices and improve reliability.

Mr Abbott said today he disagreed with those groups lobbying on behalf of business.

 

Read more:

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-08-13/abbott-joyce-spell-trouble-for-nat...

 

The joke of the NEG or "negative pricing for energy" (it's National Energy Garantee) is that Trumble accuses everyone opposing his crap NEG to be ideologically driven... He, himself, is driven not by the threat of global warming but by the cost of your kilowatts which should it go up, it's curtain for his cushy job...

Then there is Tony Abbott who in an ideologically driven push is against the caper because he is against anything that smells like an emission scheme...

Meanwhile, Beetroot/tomato Joyce-who-can't-keep-it-in-his-pants, is against the scheme because it may not work and there is no plan B... and he hates windmills...

Labor and the Greens can see that the NEG scheme won't do anything to prevent emissions of CO2 rising... 

So, idiotic Malcolm might eventually sell his NEG rubbish to the "cross benches" always in search of being relevant and getting some lollies in exchange of support...

Politics never got so bad-willed, when the planet is on a pathway to defrost like never before, since 120 million years ago... Read from top.

more floods of the century...

Pressure intensified on Saturday to save thousands still trapped by devastating floods that have killed more than 300 in the Indian state of Kerala, triggering landslides and sending torrents sweeping through villages in the region’s worst inundation crisis in a century.

Authorities warned of more torrential rain and strong winds over the weekend, as hundreds of troops and local fishermen staged desperate rescue attempts in helicopters and boats across the southern state.

Kerala, popular among international tourists for its tropical hills and beaches, has been battered by record monsoon rainfall this year.

The state is “facing the worst floods in 100 years”, chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan said on Twitter, adding that at least 324 lives have been lost so far.

Roads are damaged, mobile phone networks are down, an international airport has been closed and more than 220,000 people have been left homeless after unusually heavy rain in the past nine days.

Casualty numbers are expected to increase further, with thousands more people still stranded. Many have died from being buried in hundreds of landslides set off by the flooding.

 

Read more:

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/aug/17/kerala-floods-death-toll-r...

 

...and more floods of the century will happen next year and the year after this...

 

Read: 

wearing a beige cardigan on a hot day at the beach because mum said so...

 

 

Read from top.

more fires of the centuries...

Firefighters in Sweden have faced their worst bushfire season ever on the back of the country's hottest July since records began more than 260 years ago.

Key points:
  • Sweden recorded 18 of its warmest 19 summers in the past 25 years
  • The Mendocino fire is the largest in Californian history at 148,000 hectares
  • Australians were brought in to help fight California fires this year

 

Wildfires burned more than 24,000 hectares of land, with authorities battling 80 fires across the Nordic country at one point.

For Stockholm's chief fire officer Peter Arnevall, July 15 heralded a new breed of firestorm he had not experienced before, with blazes above the Arctic Circle.

"We've never seen anything like this," he said.

"It was so many fires at the same time and they were so large, it gave us a sense of hopelessness, because we didn't have enough resources within Sweden to handle it."

read more:

 

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-08-19/northern-hemisphere-heat-brings-un...

 

Read from top and read: 

wearing a beige cardigan on a hot day at the beach because mum said so...

more floods of the century (update)...

About 800,000 people have been displaced and more than 350 have died in the worst flooding in a century in southern India's Kerala state, according to officials.

Key points:
  • 800,000 people are sheltered in some 4,000 relief camps across Kerala
  • Floods have caused landslides and homes and bridges have collapsed
  • About 10,000 kilometres of roads have been damaged

 

Downpours that started on August 8 have triggered floods and landslides and caused homes and bridges to collapse across Kerala, a picturesque state known for its quiet tropical backwaters and beautiful beaches.

Authorities are rushing to bring drinking water to the most affected areas.

At least two trains carrying about 1.5 million litres of water were moving to the flooded areas from the neighbouring states of Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, Indian railway official Milind Deouskar said, according to the Press Trust of India news agency.

 

Read more:

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-08-19/india-floods-in-kerala-kill-hundre...

 

Read from top.

 

GLOBAL WARMING IS REAL. GLOBAL WARMING IS ANTHROPOGENIC. GLOBAL WARMING IS COMING FAST IN GEOLOGICAL TERMS. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.

 

scary melt...

The oldest and thickest sea ice in the Arctic has started to break up, opening waters north of Greenland that are normally frozen, even in summer.

This phenomenon – which has never been recorded before – has occurred twice this year due to warm winds and a climate-change driven heatwave in the northern hemisphere.

One meteorologist described the loss of ice as “scary”. Others said it could force scientists to revise their theories about which part of the Arctic will withstand warming the longest.

The sea off the north coast of Greenland is normally so frozen that it was referred to, until recently, as “the last ice area” because it was assumed that this would be the final northern holdout against the melting effects of a hotter planet.

But abnormal temperature spikes in February and earlier this month have left it vulnerable to winds, which have pushed the ice further away from the coast than at any time since satellite records began in the 1970s.

 

Read more:

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/aug/21/arctics-strongest-sea-ice-...