Old Rocks
Diamond Member
And that imagination created the warmest decade on record for the past ten years?
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Wait.
You got a 5 degree temperature increase of .06% CO2? Was that a typo or are you really saying you got a 5 degree increase in temperature from a 600PPM increase in CO2?
Good catch, I wasn't looking at the correct column in my notes, the 4.82° F rise came from the 400ppm to 800ppm trials - the doubling series. The 400ppm to 600ppm series only averaged 2.78° F.
If that's true, that's amazing.
I've never seen any other experiment come anywhere near those results and neither has Old Rocks or any other Warmer that ever posted here or on any other board
What you've done is the equivalent of Cold Fusion
Did anyone do experiments, which simulate progressive increases, in CH4, with radiance increases?
If you don't want to post tables and tables of results, I'll understand that.
No, the series of experiments (If you are interested in accuracy, you never run an experiment one time), unsurprisingly, supported the basic physics principles and understandings upon which they are based. CO2 is a very well studied GHG with over a century of accumulated experimental and observation evidence supporting its basic characteristics. But please, don't take my word for it, perform the experiments yourself.
Are you being intentionally fuzzy?
How much CO2? What increase in temperature?
Science is "intentionally fuzzy," it is always conditional and qualified, if you want convictions and absolutes you need to find religon, the real world is always relative.
The science doesn't indicate 5-7° per 200ppm for CO2 alone, in fact the science says that we will have a range of temp changes for each additional increment depending upon how much CO2 is in the air. Climate science says that short term climate sensitivity indicates that each doubling of atmospheric CO2 leads to about 3.5° C of temperature doubling in the short term and around 5-6° C after long-term equilibration of the Earth's climate. Short term expresses in several decades, long term expresses in a century or two. Both of these expressions include the variables you wanted excluded from the lab experiment and only focus on direct and immediate CO2 impact which looks, from my experiments to be about 2.68° C when we add half again as much CO2 to an dry atmosphere containing 400ppm of CO2.
Approximating the complex, rotating surface and atmospheric variations of the Earth and Earth's relationship to the variably intense, variably distant Sun would seem a daunting task, for anything but computer simulations.
Simulating revolution and revolving-related phenomena of complex but known bodies needs to be done, by some really smart people, somewhere.