This excerpt talks about how the optical depth of the atmosphere hasn't changed in 60 years. That pretty much kills the man-made global warming myth. Of course undoing three decades of misinformation and reclaiming the journals like Science is a much rougher task.
H/T Fresh Bilge
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label science. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Saturday, October 18, 2008
Think you know about climate?
It's no real secret within the sciences that the "Anthropogenic Global Warming/Man-made global warming/global warming/global climate change" hysteria is just that, hysteria. Many scientists are proponents of it because it brings them funding and it matters little that the science itself doesn't back their position.
That said, if you're interested in the facts of the matter I recommend reading the four-part letter here.
That said, if you're interested in the facts of the matter I recommend reading the four-part letter here.
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Kilauea in action.
Great webcam capture over at Fresh Bilge. All the times I've been to Hawai'i and I still haven't actually made it to Kilauea. Although that gives me a goal for next trip.
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Astronomy news to lift you skyward.
With all the doom and gloom going around, we need more good stories. So here are two about the heavens and the progress we're still making there.
First a story about the MESSENGER mission and it's new images of Mercury. Mercury is one of the closest objects to us yet is poorly understood because its nearness to the sun has made imaging of it difficult.
And yes, the that author described the spherical Mercury as "crescent shaped". It's not in the cited article at space.com yet both claim the same authorship. Someone needs to take said author to a bakery and explain the difference between a croissant and a doughnut hole.
Second is a story about COROT-Exo-3b. COROT-Exo-3b is firmly in the defined range of a brown dwarf star and would be the first observed body confirmed in that range. The curious bit is it's density, between iridium and uranium - an obscene density for a Jupiter-sized object. So it's potentially a monumental discovery for it's composition too. Either way, it's a neat discovery.
First a story about the MESSENGER mission and it's new images of Mercury. Mercury is one of the closest objects to us yet is poorly understood because its nearness to the sun has made imaging of it difficult.
And yes, the that author described the spherical Mercury as "crescent shaped". It's not in the cited article at space.com yet both claim the same authorship. Someone needs to take said author to a bakery and explain the difference between a croissant and a doughnut hole.
Second is a story about COROT-Exo-3b. COROT-Exo-3b is firmly in the defined range of a brown dwarf star and would be the first observed body confirmed in that range. The curious bit is it's density, between iridium and uranium - an obscene density for a Jupiter-sized object. So it's potentially a monumental discovery for it's composition too. Either way, it's a neat discovery.
Labels:
Astronomy,
Mercury,
new planet,
science
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