Climate change is physics

I read Gail’s excellent articles on climate change in the July Free Press with much interest, particularly “Locals’ views differ on warming theory,” where the opinions were truly saddening.

Quotes such as: “It’s climate change, but I’m not sure it’s manmade” – “It may not be something we’re causing” – “may be part of a cycle that may have come along regardless” – reveal a sad lack of basic understanding regarding our planet’s physical situation. We as a society must become clear that the physical dynamics at work in this global-warming thing are indeed well understood by those who study climate.

Please consider our planet for a moment, orbiting around our sun through a freezing cold solar system. Earth was blessed with being just the right size and distance from the sun’s heating influence for evolution to make the difference between becoming a blue planet of life or dead like Mars and Venus. Today’s atmosphere and its climate are the product of many billions of years’ worth of day-by-day geology, later joined by the processes of life.

Our atmosphere has evolved to a state of 78 percent nitrogen, 21 percent oxygen, with a fraction of 1 percent argon and 0.1 percent water vapor. According to old textbooks, squeezed into there was 0.03 percent CO2 and other greenhouse gases.

However, our fossil-fuel burning will push that concentration past 0.04 percent in the next couple years. This is worrisome because it’s like putting on an extra sweater when you don’t need it and it’s alarming because people still refuse to come to grips with that reality and its implications.

Look at astronauts’ pictures of our planet’s horizon. Our atmosphere is that narrow glowing ribbon; proportionally it’s thinner than the skin on an onion.

But size is a deceptive indicator of importance, considering that together with that tiny percentage of greenhouse gases, this thin layer of troposphere, along with the oceans, has become a heat engine circulating air, moisture, heat and energy around our globe. This is where our weather comes from, the end result of interconnected global circulation patterns — a mighty global heat engine at work.

One of many reasons we can trust the consensus of climatologists regarding these greenhouse gases is because the Army and Air Force spent years doing intense atmospheric studies to understand the situation. And why did it matter to them? Because without a flawless understanding of the energy physics of the various gases in our atmosphere, heat-seeking missiles would have been impossible.

“Skeptics” will suggest it’s the sun alone causing all this warming. But they ignore the fact that our sun has been closely observed for a long time and the range of its fluctuations is minuscule compared to the warming we are witnessing.

“Skeptics” claim there hasn’t been any warming in the past decade or so. But the surface data they point to ignores the warming that continues to be recorded in our oceans. In fact the data they cite doesn’t include most of the Arctic Circle, where the greatest warming is being observed. They also ignore the melting throughout our world’s frozen realms, known as the cryosphere, as sure a global thermometer as we can hope for.

Back to that global heat engine. We know greenhouse gases are for real; also that society is injecting them by the gigatons; thus they WILL increase our atmosphere’s insulation – it’s unavoidable physics. It will warm our planet, that warming will continue melting our cryosphere, it will increase evaporation along with our atmosphere’s holding capacity for water vapor, the most powerful greenhouse gas of all. It will increase the energy within our weather system.

Look at it another way – how can you warm a heat engine and not increase its activity? In the case of our planet, that would be increasing extremes in atmospheric conditions resulting in more storms, heat waves, droughts, extreme wind events, extreme downpours, even cold waves.

For example, given the melting at the North Pole, large areas of sun-reflecting ice cap are being replaced by heat-absorbing ocean water. This water is warming, some turning into vapor. Then the heat drives convection columns high into the troposphere, in turn creating circulation patterns that haven’t existed in eons. These go on to impact the polar circulation cell, which then impacts the flow of the jet stream.

One of the cascading consequences is reflected in the jet stream’s more erratic behavior of late. Getting more serpentine it reaches further south, grabbing warm air masses and shoving them up into arctic regions. This in turn forces cold arctic air masses to be displaced and forced southward. When these arctic fronts flow into the Atlantic Ocean’s moisture-saturated skies, well, what do you expect? Severe winter storm events. Next time something like that happen, check out the temperatures in the Arctic Circle, you’ll see what I mean.

It’s simply global heat exchange in action. There is nothing surprising about it. This is exactly the sort of behavior climatologists have been warning us about.

Of course, self-styled “skeptics” will never share that part of the story with you since all they focus on is winning their political battles.

Unfortunately, our planet doesn’t care who’s winning the political argument. All it does is react to what we are doing to it. And while our planet and life will surely do fine given eons to adjust – we and our society along with our gods will not fare so well.

Peter Miesler writes from Durango, Colo. For links to authoritative sources explaining the detailsdescribed in this essay visit Citizenschallenge. blogspot.com.

From Peter Miesler.