From: Whata Fool on
bill.sloman(a)ieee.org wrote:

>On 28 nov, 04:27, Whata Fool <wh...(a)fool.ami> wrote:
>> Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelati...(a)hotmail.com>  wrote:
>>
>> >Whata Fool wrote:
>>
>> >> bill.slo...(a)ieee.org  wrote:
>>
>> >> >The oxygen and nitrogen molecules exchange energy with carbon dioxide
>> >> >molecules whenever they collide, so the carbon dioxide radiates for
>> >> >them.
>>
>> >>          Ignoring water vapor again?     Is that a mental problem, or
>> >> an order from control?
>>
>> >LMFAO !
>>
>> >I though it was an acknowledged fact that water vapour is the big factor in climate.
>>
>> >Graham
>>
>>       I should not have been flippant, the last couple of replies seem
>> to suggest that the atmosphere would get hotter without any GHGs, and
>> you know what that means to GreenHouse Theory and Anthropogenic Global
>> Warming.
>
>That suggestion is generated by your own inadequate understanding of
>the subject under discussion. You clearly don't know enough elementary
>physics to undertand what I'm telling you, and this forum isn't a
>suitalbe place for me to take you through a beginner's course in the
>subject.


Why, do you usually teach kindergarten?





From: Whata Fool on
Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations(a)hotmail.com> wrote:

>
>
>Whata Fool wrote:
>
>> don(a)manx.misty.com (Don Klipstein) wrote:
>>
>> > I give some hope since in recent modern times Republicans in large
>> >part gave USA an ethanol mandate mandated to come specifically from
>> >*USA-grown corn* in response to lobbyists!
>>
>> Where were you when the grain elevators were filled to overflowing
>> with corn, and the price was so low many people were burning it for space
>> heating (In England and other places).
>
>We've beeen burning wheat for space heating recently due to surpluses. Sorry
>I don't have a cite. Oh maybe ....
>http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&client=opera&rls=en&hs=IOj&q=wheat+space+heating&btnG=Search&meta=cr%3DcountryUK%7CcountryGB
>
>Graham


I don't think corn is a staple for as many people as wheat,
rice and potatoes.

In the US, milled field corn is used less and less for corn bread,
with some use as corn tortillas and tamales of corn mush made with lime
water.

Ethanol does not reduce the amount of cattle feed as distillers
grain is in good supply.






From: Bill Ward on
On Fri, 28 Nov 2008 15:16:14 -0500, Whata Fool wrote:

> bill.sloman(a)ieee.org wrote:
>
>>On 28 nov, 04:27, Whata Fool <wh...(a)fool.ami> wrote:
>>> Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelati...(a)hotmail.com>  wrote:
>>>
>>> >Whata Fool wrote:
>>>
>>> >> bill.slo...(a)ieee.org  wrote:
>>>
>>> >> >The oxygen and nitrogen molecules exchange energy with carbon
>>> >> >dioxide molecules whenever they collide, so the carbon dioxide
>>> >> >radiates for them.
>>>
>>> >>          Ignoring water vapor again?     Is that a mental
>>> >> problem, or an order from control?
>>>
>>> >LMFAO !
>>>
>>> >I though it was an acknowledged fact that water vapour is the big
>>> >factor in climate.
>>>
>>> >Graham
>>>
>>>       I should not have been flippant, the last couple of replies
>>> seem to suggest that the atmosphere would get hotter without any GHGs,
>>> and you know what that means to GreenHouse Theory and Anthropogenic
>>> Global Warming.
>>
>>That suggestion is generated by your own inadequate understanding of the
>>subject under discussion. You clearly don't know enough elementary
>>physics to undertand what I'm telling you, and this forum isn't a
>>suitalbe place for me to take you through a beginner's course in the
>>subject.
>
>
> Why, do you usually teach kindergarten?

He wouldn't last 10 minutes. Kids that age always ask "Why?". It
usually takes until 6th or 7th grade to brainwash that curiosity out of
them. Then he might do OK.

From: bill.sloman on
On 28 nov, 14:19, Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelati...(a)hotmail.com>
wrote:
> Malcolm Moore wrote:
> > Eeyore  wrote:
>
> > >I spent some time working in radar. Does that make me ineligible for any other branch of electronics, > or will I always be
> > a 'radar shill' ?
>
> > >That, quite frankly is what your pitiful 'argument' boils down to.
>
> > If you were advocating that any harmful effects of radar were a
> > nonsense, I'd expect your previous employment to be made known.
> > I also hope you wouldn't attempt to give your advocacy more credence
> > by claiming to be a physiologist.
> > That is effectively what the NZCSC is doing when it claims the first
> > eight names on it's list are all "Climate Scientists".
>
> You're a screaming LOONIE !

Not the most rational of responses.

--
Bill Sloman, Nijmegen
From: bill.sloman on
On 27 nov, 20:50, Bill Ward <bw...(a)REMOVETHISix.netcom.com> wrote:
> On Thu, 27 Nov 2008 07:50:47 -0800, bill.sloman wrote:
> > On 27 nov, 06:32, Bill Ward <bw...(a)REMOVETHISix.netcom.com> wrote:
> >> On Wed, 26 Nov 2008 17:09:40 -0800, bill.sloman wrote:
> >> > On 26 nov, 22:17, Bill Ward <bw...(a)REMOVETHISix.netcom.com> wrote:
> >> >> On Wed, 26 Nov 2008 07:53:11 -0800, bill.sloman wrote:
> >> >> > On 26 nov, 12:28, Whata Fool <wh...(a)fool.ami> wrote:
> >> >> >> Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelati...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
>
> >> >> >> >bill.slo...(a)ieee.org wrote:
>
> > <snip>
>
> >> As you put it up thread, "the stratosphere isn't functioning as an
> >> insulator."
>
> >> If the stratosphere is transparent, and there is an excess of convective
> >> capacity in the troposphere (driven by the lapse rate), how can trace
> >> amounts of CO2 affect surface temperatures? If convection is
> >> sufficient to get latent heat to the tropopause, where it can radiate
> >> from cloud tops, etc, it has a clear shot at 3K deep space. The
> >> tropopause is there because it represents the top of the convective
> >> mixing layer. Because of increasing UV heating, the stratosphere has an
> >> inverted lapse rate, which prevents convection.
>
> > You seem to have set up a straw man by claiming that you can slice the
> > atmosphere into three layers -
>
> > - the troposphere where heat transfer is only by convection
>
> > - a very thin tropopause which does all the radiation
>
> > - the stratosphere which does nothing
>
> > which - unsurprisingly - leads you to incorrectly conclude that CO2 cann't do
> > anything.
>
> Where did I say the radiation all comes from a thin layer? You must be
> misinterpreting the concept of effective radiating altitude.

I very much doubt it. The proposition that the you think that all the
radiation comes from a thin layar at the tropopause folows direcly
from your claim that radiation doesn't play a significant role
anywhere in the troposphere, which strikes me as implausible.

> >> >> IR radiated from the surface would be quickly absorbed by WV,
> >> >> clouds, CO2, and other GHGs, and at 500W/m^2 would be overwhelmed by
> >> >> the 10's of kW/m^2 available from convection of latent heat.
>
> >> > Clouds scatter infra-red radiation rather than absorbing it. as do
> >> > the greenhouse gases, but that's enough to sustain a thermal
> >> > gradient.
>
> >> Surely you're not proposing the lapse rate is sustained by outgoing IR.
> >> All the sources I've seen say the troposphere is due to convection, not
> >> radiation. Can you find one to the contrary.
>
> > Don't have to. Convection and transport as latent heat both decrease
> > rapidly as you move up through the troposphere, and radiation
> > progressively takes over, becoming responsible for 100% of the heat
> > transfer by the time you get to the tropopause. This is clearly implied
> > by what I wrote earlier (which is why I've not snipped it).
>
> So you don't really understand convection or radiation. If you did, you
> might see that radiation could not generate a "thermal gradient".
> Radiation tends to equalize temperatures, you know.

Only when it is reabsorbed. Radiation from the flanks of pressure-
broadened rotational lines isn't going to be reabsorbed higher up
where the pressure broadening is less, and radiation from water vapour
isn't going to be absorbed once you get up to height where almost all
the waer vapour has frozen out - which seems to be about half way
through the troposphere, if I've correctly interpreted the
significance of the effective radiating altitude (which is an average
over all wavelengths).

> It's described by
> all that second law stuff you must have somehow skipped over.

If only I could have skipped over it. I had to slog my way through a
lot of work to get my head around that concept back in 1961, but my
subsequent encounters with the subject do suggest that my teachers
managed to get me onto the right track.

> The lapse rate is set by gas laws. Convection occurs because warm air is
> less dense than cold air, so it rises, expands, and adiabatically
> cools, still maintaining a higher temperature than its surroundings. It
> continues up until it reaches an altitude where the air around it is
> slightly warmer (the lapse rate changes) than its adiabatic temperature,
> where it releases its excess energy and stops, moving the lapse rate
> toward adiabatic.
>
> If the air rises to its dewpoint temperature, WV condenses, releasing
> latent heat and giving the rising parcel a boost. Go out and watch a
> cumulus cloud and you can see the flat bottom at the condensation
> altitude, and the energetic billowing of the cloud upward from the latent
> heat release. The principle is scalable, that's why thunderstorms can
> billow up well into the stratosphere, yielding the "anvil" shape.

Thunderheads are rare. Normally all the water vapour (and the latent
heat) has condensed out at around 6km, and that - large - proportion
of the greenhouse effect that depends on absorption by lines in the
water vapour spectrum goes away, and - for those wavelengths - this
opens the window to outer space.

> >> > Convection becomes progressively less potent as air pressure and thus
> >> > density declines with height, and as the partial pressure of water
> >> > vapour declines with decreasing temperature as it climbs up through
> >> > the tropopause, so the amount of energy transferred as latent heat
> >> > falls away with height in the same sort of way.
>
> See above, then consider what happens when an airplane encounters a TS at
> 20000 feet. IR doesn't disassemble aircraft in flight. There's plenty of
> energy in convection, even at altitude.

Thunderstorms don't occupy a particulary significant proportion of the
sky. If you want to calculate the additional global warming you get
from a few more parts per million of CO2, you don't need to allocate
all that many cells to air columns that look like thunderheads.

> > <snip>
>
> Now why did you try to hide what I was responding to? You should know
> that won't work.
>
> <unsnip>

Because it wasn't information that I saw any need to reiterate.

> >> At night, convection stops, but cooling is not required at night.
> >> Convection kicks in during the day, when cooling is needed.
>
> >> I don't see how radiative cooling is even necessary below the cloud
> >> tops, since there's plenty of cooling capacity from convection.
>
> > And there's solar energy availalbe to fuel it.
>
> <end unsnip>
>
> >> Exactly. It's a heat engine, with water as the working fluid. It cools
> >> the surface by using solar energy to convect latent heat to the cloud
> >> tops, from which it radiates as a black body to deep space. Cloud
> >> shadows are a strong, easily observable negative temperature feedback,
> >> since they cut off surface heating as the clouds develop.
>
> >> >> Once the energy reaches the tropopause, as you imply, it's a pretty
> >> >> straight shot to 3K deep space, since there's not much atmosphere
> >> >> left to absorb IR.
>
> > 25% of the mass of the atmosphere lies above the tropopause, and 25% of
> > the CO2. There's very little water vapour in the stratosphere - at -55C
> > any water around is ice.
>
> You need to keep your stories straight:
>
> Up thread, on: Wed, 26 Nov 2008 07:53:11 -0800 (PST)
>
> You said:
> "Sure. Most of the mass of the atmosphere - about 90% - is below the
> tropopause. But the stratosphere stretches out quite a long way."

Ouch. I should have made sure that I was using the same sources on
both occasions.

> Do you always adjust the facts to match your argument?

Certainly not. This is a mistake. I don't yet know precisely what kind
of mistake it is. I do know that I don't post that kind of figure
without finding a source for it, but I'm by no means confident that
I'll be able to find the conflicting sources and reconcile them

> How do you expect to retain any credibility?

Easily. We all make mistakes from time to time, and when someone
catches me out, I thank them and apologise.
I don't like having to do it, and don't have to do it often.

> >> >> Perhaps it's easier to see if you look at the lapse rate as bounded
> >> >> at the top by the effective radiating temperature, and consider the
> >> >> surface temperatures as derived from that and the adiabatic lapse
> >> >> rate.
>
> >> > This approach doesn't make it easy to see how increasing levels of
> >> > greenhouse gases produce more greenhouse warming.
>
> >> Correct. Now show me how greenhouse warming is supposed to work, in
> >> view of the inconsistencies I've pointed out.
>
> > This was a pedagogic point. I didn't intend to suggest that CO2 wasn't
> > an effective greenhouse gas, merely that this wasn't a way of looking at
> > what was going on that was helpful in letting you see where the
> > greenhouse effect is going on.
>
> So where is your explanation of how greenhouse warming is supposed to
> work, in view of the inconsistencies I've pointed out?
>
> >> CO2 isn't effective in the troposphere, because radiation is swamped by
> >> the convective transfer required to maintain the lapse rate. CO2
> >> isn't effective in the stratosphere, partly because there's so little
> >> left, and partly because it would actually cool by radiating IR at the
> >> higher stratospheric temperatures.
>
> >> So where is the CO2 causing global warming?
>
> > CO2 is not effective at the bottom of the troposphere, but it becomes
> > progressively more effective as you climb up through the troposphere
> > towards the tropopause.
> > and presumably exerts most of its effect in the upper layers of the
> > troposphere, where - incidentally - there isn't much water vapour left,
> > since it freezes out as the air gets higher and colder.
>
> >> > Convective heat
> >> > transfer normally stops at the tropopause - though energetic thunder-
> >> > heads can go higher for a while - and slows down a lot before it gets
> >> > to the tropopause, so presumably the greenhouse effect is mainly
> >> > active in the upper layers of the troposphere.
>
> >> Which is above most of the atmosphere, and dry, so the postulated
> >> positive feedback from WV also looks highly unlikely.
>
> > Only if you persist in thinking that everything has to happen in an
> > infinitely thin layer, which isn't a realistic model (which might not
> > matter if it gave the right sort of answer, which it doesn't), nor -
> > more important - a useful model,
>
> First, the thin layer bit is yours - I never even implied it.

Actually you did - by denying any role for radiation below the
tropopause, which is clearly absurd.

> Second, apparently you think a model is only useful if it, "(gives) the
> right sort of answer". Yet you continue to prattle on about radiative
> transfer models even though you admit they would only be useful in a
> limited region at the top of the troposphere.

Since the effective radiating altitude is 6km above ground, right in
the middle of the troposphere, this seems to be exactly the right
place for a radiative transfer model to be effective.

In fact it looks to me as if we need to regard the effective radiating
altitude as wavelength dependent. This altitude (when averaged over
all wavelengths) seems to coincide with the 6km where you'd expect
water vapour to stop being an an effective greenhouse gas (because it
is frozen out at higher altitudes). For the limited number of
wavelengths where carbon dioxide absorbs the effective radiating
altitude seems likely to be up in the stratosphere, where the air is a
lot colder (below the very low density outer bit which gets heated by
charged particles from the sun).

Additional carbon dioxide in the atmosphere could then be seen as
increasing the greenhouse effect primarily by increasing the pressure
broadening of the water absorbtion lines - blocking a greater
proportion of the infra-red radiation from the ground and moving the
effective radiating altitude for water vapour absorbtion lines a bit
further up into the troposphere where the air is even cooler. The
effective radiating altitude for the radiation that is absorbed by
carbon dioxide might change if you've got more carbon dioxide around,
but since it's still going to be in the stratosphere and there isn't
much of a temperature gradient in the bulk of the stratosphere this
won't significantly alter this component of the greenhouse effect.

> >> I'm slightly encouraged by your post. Did I misinterpret any of the
> >> points where you appear to agree with me?
>
> > Obviously.
>
> Well, optimism loses again.

You may like to think so, but I don't think your arguments are good
enough to carry your case.

--
Bill Sloman, Nijmegen