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Please consider what would happen on Earth starting with an atmosphere
of Carbon dioxide mixed 50:50 with water vapour. My estimate is that the sun would visually dim very little but the whole IR band of radiation would fall by some 38%. Therefore there would be 38% less heat reaching the ground. That atmosphere would warm and convection currents would start to operate. Due to expansion of gases the rising vapour would cool at the saturated lapse rate some 5 °C/km). Soon a distillation process would begin and Earth would regain something like the current temperatures but actually cooler due to a decrease in thermal energy reaching the ground. At night the heat retention of the carbon dioxide and water vapour atmosphere would save the planet from excessive temperature fluctuations as observed on the Moon of 123°C to -238 °C. |
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On 19/11/2011 14:28, Nelson wrote:
Please consider what would happen on Earth starting with an atmosphere of Carbon dioxide mixed 50:50 with water vapour. My estimate is that the sun would visually dim very little but the whole IR band of radiation would fall by some 38%. Therefore there would be 38% less heat reaching the ground. You have fundamentally failed to understand that the bulk of the radiation coming from the sun is characteristic of a black body at 5500K strongly peaked in the visible with a tail into uv and ir. The incoming radiation in a clear sky would be barely affected and it will warm the ground. The tricky bit is predicting the effect of clouds. The higher proportion of CO2 and H2O would block *outgoing* thermal infra red radiation characteristic of temperatures of around 300K. Reasonably nice graphic presentation of the main components at: http://www.globalwarmingart.com/imag...ansmission.png That atmosphere would warm and convection currents would start to operate. Due to expansion of gases the rising vapour would cool at the saturated lapse rate some 5 °C/km). Soon a distillation process would begin and Earth would regain something like the current temperatures but actually cooler due to a decrease in thermal energy reaching the ground. Almost certainly clouds would form and rain would fall until the atmosphere contained water vapour at a concentration that was roughly consistent with the prevailing ambient temperature at each latitude. After that you would have weather characteristic of those temperatures. Snow and ice would be considerably rarer. It only remains to estimate the temperature of an atmosphere of CO2 at 0.5bar (ie 50% instead of 400ppm). 50/0.4 = 125 which is close enough to 2^7 Doubling CO2 concentration gives a optimistic 2K increase and possibly as much as 5K if we are unlucky increase in global mean temperature. So the ambient temperature would be in the ball park of 14K to 35K higher than at present (best guess at present about 20C). This could in a worst case scenario allow lakes in the tropics to boil. It is also getting a bit borderline for having permanent ice at the poles in the worst case scenario. There are a few online simulators that will let you play with model planets - this is pushing them to their limits. At night the heat retention of the carbon dioxide and water vapour atmosphere would save the planet from excessive temperature fluctuations as observed on the Moon of 123°C to -238 °C. The main effect would be from clouds. And they are a double edged sword. In daytime they do reflect away a fair proportion of the incident sunlight. But equally they also stop long wave radiation from escaping and reflect back a proportion of sunlight that has penetrated. If you get mostly high cirrus or status clouds then they can enhance the greenhouse effect by trapping heat. Clear skies allow the ground to cool rapidly at night as astronomers are well aware. You should also be aware that Venus has a high very CO2 concentration and a surface temperature sufficient to melt lead. And this is despite having the highest albedo of any planet in the solar system of 0.9 -- Regards, Martin Brown |
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![]() "Martin Brown" napisal w wiadomosci ... Doubling CO2 concentration gives a optimistic 2K increase and possibly as much as 5K if we are unlucky increase in global mean temperature. Last Post wrote: "o Tyndall was the first to correctly measure the infrared absorptive powers of the gases nitrogen, oxygen, water vapour, carbon dioxide, ozone, methane, etc. He concluded that water vapour is the strongest absorber of radiant heat in the atmosphere and is the principal gas controlling air temperature. Absorption by the bulk of the other gases is negligible." To be precise the water vapour is not a gas. In the Earth atmosphere water is in form of areosol. S* |
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On 19/11/2011 18:30, Szczepan Bialek wrote:
"Martin napisal w wiadomosci ... Doubling CO2 concentration gives a optimistic 2K increase and possibly as much as 5K if we are unlucky increase in global mean temperature. Last Post wrote: "o Tyndall was the first to correctly measure the infrared absorptive powers of the gases nitrogen, oxygen, water vapour, carbon dioxide, ozone, methane, etc. He concluded that water vapour is the strongest absorber of radiant heat in the atmosphere and is the principal gas controlling air temperature. Absorption by the bulk of the other gases is negligible." Water is a major factor, but CO2 and CH4 are the ones that we can control. Around 70% of the planet is covered with oceans so the lower atmosphere will always have plenty of water vapour in the troposphere. To be precise the water vapour is not a gas. In the Earth atmosphere water is in form of areosol. S* Water vapour is present as both an aerosol (solid phase and droplets) in clouds and as a gas in vapour phase. The measurement of relative humidity gives you a rough idea of how much water vapour is present in the atmosphere. When the dew point is reached and the atmosphere becomes (super)saturated then water comes out as either fog or dew on cooler surfaces like car roofs and grass. Being November in the UK it is foggy today (first time this season). -- Regards, Martin Brown |
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![]() "Martin Brown" napisal w wiadomosci ... On 19/11/2011 18:30, Szczepan Bialek wrote: "Martin napisal w wiadomosci ... Doubling CO2 concentration gives a optimistic 2K increase and possibly as much as 5K if we are unlucky increase in global mean temperature. Last Post wrote: "o Tyndall was the first to correctly measure the infrared absorptive powers of the gases nitrogen, oxygen, water vapour, carbon dioxide, ozone, methane, etc. He concluded that water vapour is the strongest absorber of radiant heat in the atmosphere and is the principal gas controlling air temperature. Absorption by the bulk of the other gases is negligible." Water is a major factor, but CO2 and CH4 are the ones that we can control. Yes. We can control but in very long periods. The content of CO2 is the number of people dependent. People "reworked" the carbon from the soil into gaseous CO2. Around 70% of the planet is covered with oceans so the lower atmosphere will always have plenty of water vapour in the troposphere. Here we can control locally by ionization and another ways. Watering work like the oceans. To be precise the water vapour is not a gas. In the Earth atmosphere water is in form of aerosol. S* Water vapour is present as both an aerosol (solid phase and droplets) in clouds and as a gas in vapour phase. The Earth has an excess of electrons. So below 100C most molecules H2O are in form of agregates (heavy ions). The measurement of relative humidity gives you a rough idea of how much water vapour is present in the atmosphere. When the dew point is reached and the atmosphere becomes (super)saturated then water comes out as either fog or dew on cooler surfaces like car roofs and grass. May be that "water vapour is present in the atmosphere" in form of very fine aerosols only. "Water vapour present in the atmosphere" is "strongest absorber of radiant heat in the atmosphere and is the principal gas controlling air temperature." Gas do not absorb of radiant heat. So water vapour present in the atmosphere is not the gas. May it be right? S* |
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On 20/11/2011 17:21, Szczepan Bialek wrote:
"Martin napisal w wiadomosci ... On 19/11/2011 18:30, Szczepan Bialek wrote: "Martin napisal w wiadomosci ... Doubling CO2 concentration gives a optimistic 2K increase and possibly as much as 5K if we are unlucky increase in global mean temperature. Last Post wrote: "o Tyndall was the first to correctly measure the infrared absorptive powers of the gases nitrogen, oxygen, water vapour, carbon dioxide, ozone, methane, etc. He concluded that water vapour is the strongest absorber of radiant heat in the atmosphere and is the principal gas controlling air temperature. Absorption by the bulk of the other gases is negligible." Water is a major factor, but CO2 and CH4 are the ones that we can control. Yes. We can control but in very long periods. The content of CO2 is the number of people dependent. People "reworked" the carbon from the soil into gaseous CO2. More like burning the fossilised carboniferous forests and gas & oil. Around 70% of the planet is covered with oceans so the lower atmosphere will always have plenty of water vapour in the troposphere. Here we can control locally by ionization and another ways. Watering work like the oceans. Even allowing for Englush not being your native language this is indecipherable. To be precise the water vapour is not a gas. In the Earth atmosphere water is in form of aerosol. S* Water vapour is present as both an aerosol (solid phase and droplets) in clouds and as a gas in vapour phase. The Earth has an excess of electrons. So below 100C most molecules H2O are in form of agregates (heavy ions). Rubbish. Water vapour in the atmosphere might cluster a bit, but plenty of it is present as individual molecules as the gaps in the atmospheric IR spectrum of the sun amply demonstrates. The measurement of relative humidity gives you a rough idea of how much water vapour is present in the atmosphere. When the dew point is reached and the atmosphere becomes (super)saturated then water comes out as either fog or dew on cooler surfaces like car roofs and grass. May be that "water vapour is present in the atmosphere" in form of very fine aerosols only. No. That would give distinctive nano particle effects that are not normally observed. Mie scattering for instance. "Water vapour present in the atmosphere" is "strongest absorber of radiant heat in the atmosphere and is the principal gas controlling air temperature." Gas do not absorb of radiant heat. So water vapour present in the atmosphere is not the gas. This is complete garbage. Monoatomic and diatomic molecules do not have the right modes of oscillation to absorb in the near or far infrared. Triatomic and higher polyatomic molecules do have suitable lower energy assymetric oscillations available to excite. Simple example Symmetric stretching: O2 O=O O==O O=O O==O Minimum energy required is enough to stretch O=O bond. CO2 O=C=O O==C==O O=C=O O==C==O Minimum energy required is enough to stretch two C=O bonds at once Asymmetric CO2 oscillation CO2 O=C==O O==C=O O=C==O O==C=O Requires a lot less energy to oscillate because one bond is stretched when the other is compressed. Bending is harder to draw in ASCII art. Some online animations of triatomic molecules normal modes: http://www.jce.divched.org/jcewww/articles/www0001/ May it be right? S* No it is incomprehensible gibberish. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#7
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![]() "Martin Brown" napisal w wiadomosci ... On 20/11/2011 17:21, Szczepan Bialek wrote: "Martin napisal w wiadomosci ... On 19/11/2011 18:30, Szczepan Bialek wrote: "Martin napisal w wiadomosci ... Doubling CO2 concentration gives a optimistic 2K increase and possibly as much as 5K if we are unlucky increase in global mean temperature. Last Post wrote: "o Tyndall was the first to correctly measure the infrared absorptive powers of the gases nitrogen, oxygen, water vapour, carbon dioxide, ozone, methane, etc. He concluded that water vapour is the strongest absorber of radiant heat in the atmosphere and is the principal gas controlling air temperature. Absorption by the bulk of the other gases is negligible." Water is a major factor, but CO2 and CH4 are the ones that we can control. Yes. We can control but in very long periods. The content of CO2 is the number of people dependent. People "reworked" the carbon from the soil into gaseous CO2. More like burning the fossilised carboniferous forests and gas & oil. That is also the number of people dependent. Around 70% of the planet is covered with oceans so the lower atmosphere will always have plenty of water vapour in the troposphere. Here we can control locally by ionization and another ways. Watering work like the oceans. Even allowing for Englush not being your native language this is indecipherable. Sticky air and the heat waves are caused by producing the water wapour by watering and burning gas & oil. To be precise the water vapour is not a gas. In the Earth atmosphere water is in form of aerosol. S* Water vapour is present as both an aerosol (solid phase and droplets) in clouds and as a gas in vapour phase. The Earth has an excess of electrons. So below 100C most molecules H2O are in form of agregates (heavy ions). Rubbish. Water vapour in the atmosphere might cluster a bit, but plenty of it is present as individual molecules as the gaps in the atmospheric IR spectrum of the sun amply demonstrates. The measurement of relative humidity gives you a rough idea of how much water vapour is present in the atmosphere. When the dew point is reached and the atmosphere becomes (super)saturated then water comes out as either fog or dew on cooler surfaces like car roofs and grass. May be that "water vapour is present in the atmosphere" in form of very fine aerosols only. No. That would give distinctive nano particle effects that are not normally observed. Mie scattering for instance. "Water vapour present in the atmosphere" is "strongest absorber of radiant heat in the atmosphere and is the principal gas controlling air temperature." Gas do not absorb of radiant heat. So water vapour present in the atmosphere is not the gas. This is complete garbage. Monoatomic and diatomic molecules do not have the right modes of oscillation to absorb in the near or far infrared. Triatomic and higher polyatomic molecules do have suitable lower energy assymetric oscillations available to excite. Simple example Symmetric stretching: O2 O=O O==O O=O O==O Minimum energy required is enough to stretch O=O bond. CO2 O=C=O O==C==O O=C=O O==C==O Minimum energy required is enough to stretch two C=O bonds at once Asymmetric CO2 oscillation CO2 O=C==O O==C=O O=C==O O==C=O Requires a lot less energy to oscillate because one bond is stretched when the other is compressed. Bending is harder to draw in ASCII art. Some online animations of triatomic molecules normal modes: http://www.jce.divched.org/jcewww/articles/www0001/ "In this example, we employ a simple matrix algorithm described by Gwin (2) to characterize molecular vibrations for both linear (carbon dioxide) and non-linear (sulfur dioxide) triatomic molecules" Tyndall made the measurements. May it be right? S* No it is incomprehensible gibberish. You wrote: "Water vapour in the atmosphere might cluster a bit,". So I am a bit right. This bit should be dependent on the electric voltage. There are devices to produce the ionised air. There are the clusters of water molecules. Electrons from thr Sun's storms can work in the same way. S* |
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On 21/11/2011 18:16, Szczepan Bialek wrote:
"Martin napisal w wiadomosci ... On 20/11/2011 17:21, Szczepan Bialek wrote: May it be right? S* No it is incomprehensible gibberish. You wrote: "Water vapour in the atmosphere might cluster a bit,". So I am a bit right. No you are wrong and spouting complete gibberish. And doing it again below. This bit should be dependent on the electric voltage. There are devices to produce the ionised air. There are the clusters of water molecules. Electrons from thr Sun's storms can work in the same way. S* Water in nearly saturated conditions and moderate temperatures forms dimers and possibly higher clusters because of hydrogen bonding. The measurements and models suggest around 0.8% at 90% RH and 50C rising to around 2% for 95% RH and 20C see for example this paper in Natu http://www.nature.com/nature/journal.../260131a0.html This has nothing at all to do with "electrons from the suns storms" and everything to do with the molecular orbital structure of H2O. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
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![]() "Martin Brown" napisal w wiadomosci ... On 21/11/2011 18:16, Szczepan Bialek wrote: "Martin napisal w wiadomosci ... On 20/11/2011 17:21, Szczepan Bialek wrote: May it be right? S* No it is incomprehensible gibberish. You wrote: "Water vapour in the atmosphere might cluster a bit,". So I am a bit right. No you are wrong and spouting complete gibberish. And doing it again below. This bit should be dependent on the electric voltage. There are devices to produce the ionised air. There are the clusters of water molecules. Electrons from thr Sun's storms can work in the same way. S* Water in nearly saturated conditions and moderate temperatures forms dimers and possibly higher clusters because of hydrogen bonding. All areosols must be charged. Without charge they fall down. The Earth has the excess of electrons. All areosols have the excess of electrons. But the boiling point has also something to do. CO2 has -78C. H2O +100C. Which of them can form an areosol in our atmosphere? The measurements and models suggest around 0.8% at 90% RH and 50C rising to around 2% for 95% RH and 20C see for example this paper in Natu http://www.nature.com/nature/journal.../260131a0.html This has nothing at all to do with "electrons from the suns storms" and everything to do with the molecular orbital structure of H2O. I have found also the link "without" electrons: http://www.thenakedscientists.com/HT...interview/712/ If Authors do not mention the electrons that do not mean that the excess of electrons in the atmosphere do not exist. Am I right? I am not an expert. I am trying ony to fit to the Tyndall's result. S* |
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