My concern with HT and water vapor is the difficulty of heating oceans in specific locations. This mostly new theory helps explain this local SST change, which then aids the CO2 change, which is used to bludgeon us. “Ocean heating can only come from the sun” was my view until now. And given the role of clouds that have been effecting SST this must surely also contribute? As usual, the climate is too complex for my average brain
A whole 'nother field to explore - packed with a lot of scientific data. I'm especially interested in the Hunga Tonga eruption and the resultant water vapor cast into the stratosphere and its warming effect. This paper sheds some light on how tidal pumping and plate tectonics may have caused the Tonga eruption. The astrophysics are more than a little over my head, but very interesting.
I just googled how long our solar system takes to rotate around the milky way. About 225-240 million years moving at about 500,000 mph. With that information I think the chances of CO2 affecting our climate are absolutely mininscule at best?
My concern with HT and water vapor is the difficulty of heating oceans in specific locations. This mostly new theory helps explain this local SST change, which then aids the CO2 change, which is used to bludgeon us. “Ocean heating can only come from the sun” was my view until now. And given the role of clouds that have been effecting SST this must surely also contribute? As usual, the climate is too complex for my average brain
A whole 'nother field to explore - packed with a lot of scientific data. I'm especially interested in the Hunga Tonga eruption and the resultant water vapor cast into the stratosphere and its warming effect. This paper sheds some light on how tidal pumping and plate tectonics may have caused the Tonga eruption. The astrophysics are more than a little over my head, but very interesting.
I just googled how long our solar system takes to rotate around the milky way. About 225-240 million years moving at about 500,000 mph. With that information I think the chances of CO2 affecting our climate are absolutely mininscule at best?
Great article.And yes these influences are real and have shown over thousands if not millions of years.I see the track of your thinking.Makes sense.