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science2017.globalchange.gov
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| | | | | This report is an authoritative assessment of the science of climate change, with a focus on the United States. It represents the first of two volumes of the Fourth National Climate Assessment, mandated by the Global Change Research Act of 1990. | |
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bobtisdale.wordpress.com
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| | | | | UPDATE: Corrected the percentage of ocean heat loss though evaporation. Update 2: I added a link to a post by Willis Eschenbach at the end, and I corrected a typo. # # # Ocean heat content and vertically averaged temperature data for the oceans have been the subjects of a couple of recent blog posts.... | |
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johncarlosbaez.wordpress.com
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| | | | | guest post by Jan Galkowski 1. How Heat Flows and Why It Matters Is there something missing in the recent climate temperature record? Heat is most often experienced as energy density, related to temperature. While technically temperature is only meaningful for a body in thermal equilibrium, temperature is the operational definition of heat content, both... | |
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www.drroyspencer.com
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| | | [AI summary] The discussion revolves around the greenhouse effect and its role in global warming, with conflicting views on the magnitude of warming, the energy balance, and the role of solar activity. Key points include debates over the actual warming effect of greenhouse gases (GHGs), the energy imbalance, and the attribution of recent warming to natural causes versus human-induced factors. There are also mentions of solar activity, satellite data, and the role of the oceans in heat storage. The conversation includes references to scientific studies, models, and data sources such as the AIRS satellite and Schuckmann et al. 2023, highlighting the complexity and ongoing nature of climate science discussions. | ||