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nope, I never made such a claim, ol wash, rinse, repeat liar dude.A CO2 molecule vibrating is only allowed to emit.sure, as long as it isn't colliding with other molecules. And when it does, it emits to space the colder area off of the surface.nope, never said that. you're a liar. wash, rinse, repeat.
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Northern nations warming faster than global average
After IR is absorbed by CO2, can CO2 ever emit IR?
sure, as long as it isn't colliding with other molecules.
Only CO2 that doesn't collide is allowed to emit? Link?
Carbon Dioxide Absorbs and Re-emits Infrared Radiation | UCAR Center for Science Education
"The energy from the photon causes the CO2 molecule to vibrate. Some time later, the molecule gives up this extra energy by emitting another infrared photon. Once the extra energy has been removed by the emitted photon, the carbon dioxide molecule stops vibrating."
You're contradicting your previous claims. First you said they never emit again, now you say they do.
Were you wrong at first or are you wrong now?