APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

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Expand view Topic review: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by mjimih » Fri May 17, 2013 12:17 am

ASIMO
Advanced Step in Innovative Mobility
he's not really a demon slave, he's a conductor!
Click to play embedded YouTube video.


M

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by neufer » Thu May 16, 2013 9:12 pm

mjimih wrote:
Beyond wrote:
Well, there goes unemployment.

It's going to take a ghastly amount of people to decarbonize these carbon collectors and deal with the carbon that was collected.
"I'll do it!
ImageImage
Asmodeus as depicted in Collin de Plancy's Dictionnaire Infernal.
http://asterisk.apod.com/viewtopic.php? ... us#p162397

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by Beyond » Thu May 16, 2013 8:27 pm

Heh, you're going to need a quite a bit bigger battery :!: :mrgreen:

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by mjimih » Thu May 16, 2013 8:19 pm

Beyond wrote:Well, there goes unemployment. It's going to take a ghastly amount of people to decarbonize these carbon collectors and deal with the carbon that was collected.
"I'll do it!
Image

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by Beyond » Thu May 16, 2013 8:05 pm

Well, there goes unemployment. It's going to take a ghastly amount of people to decarbonize these carbon collectors and deal with the carbon that was collected.

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by mjimih » Thu May 16, 2013 7:48 pm

Oh sorry. These are one form of what some researchers are envisioning for a method of carbon sequestration. Looks like they'll need to plant thousands n thousands of them.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_dio ... ing_towers
Carbon dioxide removal
Artificial trees
Artificial trees

A notable example of an atmospheric scrubbing process are the artificial trees. This concept, proposed by climate scientist Wallace S. Broecker and science writer Robert Kunzig, imagines huge numbers of artificial trees around the world to remove ambient CO2. The technology is now being pioneered by Klaus Lackner, a researcher at the Earth Institute, Columbia University, whose artificial tree technology can suck up to 1,000 times more CO2 from the air than real trees can, at a rate of about one ton of carbon per day if the artificial tree is approximately the size of an actual tree. The CO2 would be captured in a filter and then removed from the filter and stored.
Mark

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by Beyond » Thu May 16, 2013 7:17 pm

Hmm... just what are they??

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by mjimih » Thu May 16, 2013 6:17 pm

very dynamic. It'll be hard to beat, comfort-wise, what we have had for the last 100 years or so (not including the last 10+ "hot" years). Nice 'n temperate and stable. We could plant a lot of these, I hear they don't need water :wink:
Image

Mark

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by Chris Peterson » Thu May 16, 2013 2:40 pm

mjimih wrote:I think after we're gone the plants and oceans would rectify the situation to pre industrial levels right?
Not necessarily. Climate is metastable- it tends to jump between states of relative local stability. It isn't clear that we are currently in the same local zone of stability we were in a hundred years ago. At this point, even if we stopped influencing the atmosphere at all (and keeping in mind that the recovery times for greenhouse gases range from decades to centuries) it's possible that everything will settle down in a different state than we had in pre-industrial times.

Without active countermeasures (something we don't understand well at all), "recovery" may no longer be an option.

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by neufer » Thu May 16, 2013 11:55 am

mjimih wrote:
And methane? How does that stuff breakdown. Potentially a lot of it could start bubbling up out of ocean floors or from all those permafrost areas starting to get mushy. Hard to judge as the chart here seems to show a slowdown as of 2005?
Methane takes about 2 to 3 times longer to breakdown in the stratosphere than CFCs.

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by mjimih » Thu May 16, 2013 8:29 am

Permafrost
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permafrost ... nsequences
Ecological consequences
Should a substantial amount of the carbon enter the atmosphere, it would accelerate planetary warming. A significant proportion will emerge as methane, which is produced when the breakdown occurs in lakes or wetlands. Although it does not remain in the atmosphere for long, methane traps more of the sun’s heat. The potential for large methane emissions in the Arctic is poorly understood. The United States Department of Energy and the European Union recently committed to related research projects. Preliminary computer analyses suggest that permafrost could produce carbon equal to 15 percent or so of today’s emissions from human activities

thanks. And methane? How does that stuff breakdown. Potentially a lot of it could start bubbling up out of ocean floors or from all those permafrost areas starting to get mushy. Hard to judge as the chart here seems to show a slowdown as of 2005?

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by neufer » Wed May 15, 2013 8:33 pm

mjimih wrote:
I think after we're gone the plants and oceans would rectify the situation to pre industrial levels right? I can't find a study describing how fast or by how much though. Too many websites to look through, anyone?
Estimated recovery of the Antarctic ozone hole is currently taking ~75 years (starting from around the year 2,000) due to the time it takes to breakdown CFC's in the stratosphere.

However, recovery of CO2 would take ~10 times as long due to a much slower breakdown time of CO2 in the stratosphere.

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by emc » Wed May 15, 2013 7:25 pm

all i’m say’n is naming our atmosphere “easier” makes breathing easier a lifelong thing... even though we are messier-than-77, we wouldn’t be worried about globular warming as much

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by mjimih » Wed May 15, 2013 7:08 pm

by emc
our atmosphere should be called easier… maybe there should be less stress on the planet
I think after we're gone the plants and oceans would rectify the situation to pre industrial levels right? I can't find a study describing how fast or by how much though. Too many websites to look through, anyone?
Image

Mark

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by emc » Wed May 15, 2013 7:01 pm

Beyond wrote: ED, have you been nibbling on some 'loco-weed' :?: :?:
it wouldn't matter

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by Beyond » Wed May 15, 2013 5:43 pm

emc wrote:our atmosphere should be called easier… maybe there would be less stress on the planet
ED, have you been nibbling on some 'loco-weed' :?: :?:

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by emc » Wed May 15, 2013 5:05 pm

neufer wrote:
BMAONE23 wrote:
http://www.latimes.com/news/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-carbon-dioxide-400-20130513,0,7196126.story wrote:
Carbon dioxide measurements in the Earth's atmosphere did not break the symbolic milestone of 400 parts per million at a Hawaiian observatory last week, according to a revised reading from the nation's climate observers.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) revised its May 9 reading at the Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii, saying it remained fractions of a point below the level of 400 ppm, at 399.89.
We can all breath a little easier :yes:
our atmosphere should be called easier… maybe there would be less stress on the planet

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by bystander » Wed May 15, 2013 4:56 pm

OMG, how could they get it so wrong, just 399.89. :roll:

400 | Bad Astronomy | 2013 May 11
On May 9, 2013, atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide hit a new record high. Announced by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the levels of CO2 in the air on that day* reached a daily average of 400 parts per million (ppm). This is the highest level of atmospheric CO2 in human history, and in fact the highest level for at least 800,000 years. It gets worse: the amount of CO2 in the air likely hasn’t been this high since the Pliocene Epoch, more than three million years ago.
...
The simple truth is this: More carbon dioxide is in the air than there has been for millions of years. The world is warming up, and it’s due to human influence. If we do nothing it’ll continue to rise, and even if we get our act together it’ll get worse before it gets better.

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by neufer » Wed May 15, 2013 4:26 pm

BMAONE23 wrote:
http://www.latimes.com/news/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-carbon-dioxide-400-20130513,0,7196126.story wrote:
Carbon dioxide measurements in the Earth's atmosphere did not break the symbolic milestone of 400 parts per million at a Hawaiian observatory last week, according to a revised reading from the nation's climate observers.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) revised its May 9 reading at the Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii, saying it remained fractions of a point below the level of 400 ppm, at 399.89.
We can all breath a little easier :yes:

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by BMAONE23 » Wed May 15, 2013 4:19 pm

LA Times reports NOAA revises number
Carbon dioxide in atmosphere did not break 400 ppm at Hawaii site
Carbon dioxide measurements in the Earth's atmosphere did not break the symbolic milestone of 400 parts per million at a Hawaiian observatory last week, according to a revised reading from the nation's climate observers.


The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) revised its May 9 reading at the Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii, saying it remained fractions of a point below the level of 400 ppm, at 399.89.

Re: APOD: Carbon dioxide passes symbolic mark

by mjimih » Sun May 12, 2013 4:54 am

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22486153
Carbon dioxide passes symbolic mark
10 May 2013
Image
Carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere have broken through a symbolic mark.
Daily measurements of CO2 at a US government agency lab on Hawaii have topped 400 parts per million for the first time. The station, which sits on the Mauna Loa volcano, feeds its numbers into a continuous record of the concentration of the gas stretching back to 1958. The last time CO2 was regularly above 400ppm was three to five million years ago - before modern humans existed. Scientists say the climate back then was also considerably warmer than it is today. Carbon dioxide is regarded as the most important of the manmade greenhouse gases blamed for raising the temperature on the planet over recent decades. Human sources come principally from the burning of fossil fuels such as coal, oil and gas. The usual trend seen at the volcano is for the CO2 concentration to rise in winter months and then to fall back as the northern hemisphere growing season kicks in. Forests and other vegetation pull some of the gas out of the atmosphere. This means the number can be expected to decline by a few ppm below 400 in the coming weeks. But the long-term trend is upwards.

Carbon by proxy

James Butler is responsible for the Earth System Research Laboratory, a facility on Mauna Loa belonging to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa). Its daily average CO2 concentration figure on Thursday was 400.03. Dr Butler told BBC News: "Carbon dioxide has some variability on an hourly, daily and weekly basis, so we are not comfortable calling a single number - the lowest we will go is on a daily average, which has happened in this case. "Mauna Loa and the South Pole observatory are iconic sites as they have been taking CO2 measurements in real time since 1958. Last year, for the first time, all Arctic sites reached 400ppm. "This is the first time the daily average has passed 400ppm at Mauna Loa."
The long-term measurements at Mauna Loa were started by a Scripps Institution of Oceanography scientist called Charles Keeling. In 1958, he found the concentration at the top of the volcano to be around 315ppm (that is 315 molecules of CO2 for every one million molecules in the air). Every year since then, the "Keeling Curve", as it has become known, has squiggled resolutely higher. Scripps still operates equipment alongside Noaa on the mountain peak. Its readings have been pushing 400ppm in recent days, and on Thursday recorded a daily average of 399.73.
But Noaa senior scientist Pieter Tans said: "Our measurements (Noaa) are in Coordinated Universal Time, while the Keeling measurements are in local Hawaii time. If you shift the Keeling definition of a day to the same as ours then we do agree almost completely on the measurements." By this definition, the Keeling team's Thursday number would be 400.08ppm.
And Dr Butler added: "Probably next year, or the year after that, the average yearly reading will pass 400pm. "A couple of years after that, the South Pole will have readings of 400ppm, and in eight to nine years we will probably have seen the last CO2 reading under 400ppm." To determine CO2 levels before the introduction of modern stations, scientists must use so-called proxy measurements. These include studying the bubbles of ancient air trapped in Antarctic ice. One of these can be used to describe CO2 levels over the past 800,000 years. It suggests that CO2 held steady over this longer period at between 200ppm and 300ppm. British atmospheric physicist Prof Joanna Haigh commented: "In itself, the value 400ppm of CO2 has no particular significance for the physics of the climate system: concentration levels have been in the 300s for so long and now we've passed the 400 mark. However, this does give us the chance to mark the ongoing increase in CO2 concentration and talk about why it's a problem for the climate."

"Like a funnel"

by neufer » Thu Nov 10, 2011 9:48 pm

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=76377 wrote:

<<Greenland’s Jakobshavn glacier has the potential to influence sea level rise more than any other single feature in the Northern Hemisphere. Like a funnel, the large glacier channels ice from much of the Greenland ice sheet into the Atlantic Ocean, at a rate of about 15 kilometers per year. It is the world’s fastest flowing glacier.

Why do some glaciers, like Jakobshavn, feed ice into the ocean so quickly while others barely move at all? Answering that question is crucial because if we are to predict how much sea levels will rise as Earth warms, we have to know how much ice glaciers will deliver to the ocean. The key to predicting glacier flow is to map the ground beneath the ice—a concept described in the Earth Observatory’s new feature, IceBridge: Building a record of Earth’s changing ice, one flight at a time.
  • The shape of the land where a glacier meets the ocean influences how the glacier will behave, says Sophie Nowicki, a scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center who studies ice sheets using computer models. If the ground slopes downhill as you move inland from the ocean—or if the glacier is channeled through a deep canyon or fjord—then it’s a sure bet that the glacier will retreat quickly. In contrast, bumps or ridges beneath the glacier can act as pinning points and stop the retreat.
Jakobshavn, it turns out, flows through a deep canyon. The image on the right shows the shape of Jakobshavn’s bed based on radar measurements made by an instrument now flying on airplanes as part of NASA’s IceBridge mission. The instrument made these measurements on earlier flights, but additional flights on IceBridge continue to refine the picture. Dark blue reveals the deep channel through which Jakobshavn flows.
  • “Before IceBridge, this measurement of Jakobshavn was the best bed we had,” says Nowicki, pointing to a crude figure (image left) illustrating what was once the best picture of the ground beneath any glacier. “With much more data from the radar instrument (on IceBridge and earlier flights), we realized that the bed of Jakobshavn Isbrae is a channel that could be compared to the Grand Canyon. It’s the same width, the same depth.” Ice-flow models that use the new measurements of the Jakobshavn bed now match pretty closely with the real-world observations of its movements.
Because the new bed measurements improve ice-flow models, they will also help scientists understand how much ice could contribute to sea level rise in the future. With regular flights over the next six years, IceBridge will map out glacier beds throughout Greenland and Antarctica.>>

[B]erkeley [E]arth [S]urface [T]emperature project

by neufer » Wed Oct 26, 2011 2:10 pm

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/capital-weather-gang/post/will-new-climate-studies-settle-skeptics-questions-dont-hold-your-breath/2011/10/23/gIQApUDiCM_blog.html wrote:
Will new studies confirming global warming settle skeptics’ questions? Don’t hold your breath
By Andrew Freedman, Washington Post
Posted at 11:33 AM ET, 10/24/2011

<<During the past several years, some skeptics of manmade global warming have focused their attention on the reliability of the modern surface temperature record, which according to numerous studies, shows a distinct warming trend starting in the middle of the 20th century, and continuing through the present day.

The surface temperature record isn’t reliable, the skeptics argue, because the data is biased by the urban heat island effect, which can raise temperatures in cities compared to rural locations. And even if it isn’t biased because of the heat island effect, the skeptics reason, the record can’t be trusted because of the statistical methods scientists have used to account for missing or intermittent temperature data over time, and sparse data coverage across certain areas, like the Arctic.

Another common skeptic argument has been that too few surface observation stations are used for global climate change studies, and many of these stations suffer from data quality issues.

Now a new series of studies has come along, produced by someone known for his skepticism of mainstream climate science, which conclude that these skeptic arguments are simply not tenable.

Of course, there were previous studies showing that some, if not all, of these concerns had little factual basis – particularly concerning the urban heat island issue. But the skeptics ignored those, and the questions persisted, and grew louder in the wake of the so-called “climategate” email scandal that raised doubts about the credibility of one of the main sources of surface temperature data, the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia, in Britain. Texas Governor Rick Perry, for example, still makes references to the “climategate” dustup (among other reasons) in justifying his skepticism of manmade climate change, and the state of Texas cited concerns about the reliability of the surface record in a petition for the U.S. EPA to reconsider its finding that carbon dioxide, a climate-warming greenhouse gas, endangers public health and welfare. The new studies will make it much, much harder to credibly cast suspicion upon the surface temperature record.

Known as the “Berkeley Earth Study,” the interdisciplinary collaboration headed by Richard Muller, a noted physicist, sought to directly address the legitimate questions concerning the reliability of the surface temperature record. The Berkeley Earth analysis shows 0.911 degrees Celsius of land warming (+/- 0.042 C) since the 1950s, which translates to about 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit.

The Berkeley study analyzed data from more than 39,000 weather stations, more than five times the 7,280 stations found in the Global Historical Climatology Network Monthly data set (GHCN-M) that has served as the foundation of many other climate studies. The researchers employed new statistical methods that, the team says, more accurately take into account discontinuities in the data as well as data quality questions.

Muller has (or had) credibility in the skeptic community due to his criticisms of mainstream climate science findings. So while the conclusions reached by Muller’s group are not exactly surprising, the source of those conclusions is noteworthy.

The Berkeley team’s analysis strongly refutes claims that the urban heat island effect causes a warm temperature bias in the surface data. The researchers also found that despite the skeptics’ assertions, readings from networks of temperature stations are not compromised by poor data quality from many of the individual stations.

The Berkeley Earth Study should put the criticisms of the surface record to rest. As Andy Revkin of the New York Times’ Dot Earth blog wrote, “Muller’s work... appears to completely undercut efforts to raise doubts about the extent of recent warming.”

And as Muller himself wrote in an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, a paper whose editorial board routinely casts doubt on the existence of global warming, let alone manmade global warming:

When we began our study, we felt that skeptics had raised legitimate issues, and we didn’t know what we’d find. Our results turned out to be close to those published by prior groups. We think that means that those groups had truly been very careful in their work, despite their inability to convince some skeptics of that. They managed to avoid bias in their data selection, homogenization and other corrections.

Global warming is real. Perhaps our results will help cool this portion of the climate debate…

I doubt Muller’s work will end the debate regarding the surface data, though, judging from the reactions of some climate skeptics. Blogger Anthony Watts, for example, who had previously written that he was “prepared to accept whatever result they produce, even if it proves my premise wrong,” slammed the Berkeley group for releasing its results before the studies underwent peer review.

“I know that I’ll be criticized for my position on this, since I said back in March that I would accept their findings whatever they were, but that was when I expected them to do science per the scientific process,” Watts wrote.

The irony in this reaction is that Watts and his contributors have long criticized the same peer review process, and they frequently post non-peer reviewed analyses and papers online.

Of Watts’ work, the Berkeley team states in a press release:

Stations ranked as “poor” in a survey by Anthony Watts and his team of the most important temperature recording stations in the U.S., (known as the USHCN -- the US Historical Climatology Network), showed the same pattern of global warming as stations ranked “OK”. Absolute temperatures of poor stations may be higher and less accurate, but the overall global warming trend is the same, and the Berkeley Earth analysis concludes that there is not any undue bias from including poor stations in the survey.

The Berkeley team has put its data and methods online, allowing for anyone to verify its work. This is a good sign, since it demonstrates that scientists have learned from “Climategate” and other recent pseudo-scandals that being transparent is the best way to earn credibility, rather than simply appealing to authority. Hopefully the peer review process (in the broadest meaning of that term) will bolster the studies’ findings when all is said and done, and we can finally move on to the more legitimately pressing questions in climate science, such as how high sea levels will rise between now and the end of this century.>>

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by Chris Peterson » Wed Oct 26, 2011 1:55 pm

vikaivanova wrote:Then all the plankton dies,, as do the rest of the life in the sea
Life is resilient. Even in the greatest extinctions, where most life has died out, much has survived- and rapidly evolved to fill the freed up niches. There is certainly nothing happening now that suggests everything will die- and most certainly not everything in the sea. Global warming is likely to be very unpleasant for humans (but hardly fatal to our species); for the rest of the biosphere, it's just change. Species come, species go. This just happens to be one of those times when the action is speeded up.

Re: APOD: Global Warming Predictions (2009 April 21)

by vikaivanova » Wed Oct 26, 2011 5:18 am

Then all the plankton dies,, as do the rest of the life in the sea

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