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AMO
Jul 20, 2018 17:24:59 GMT
Post by blustnmtn on Jul 20, 2018 17:24:59 GMT
My ββ76 CB750 f1 displayed from Dropbox using the method described by Naut and I. This was done from Ipad using Safari.
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Post by missouriboy on Jul 20, 2018 19:11:00 GMT
Can everyone now see this image?
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Post by blustnmtn on Jul 20, 2018 19:37:31 GMT
Can everyone now see this image? I SEE IT BROTHER!!! VICTORY.
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AMO
Jul 20, 2018 20:43:11 GMT
via mobile
Post by acidohm on Jul 20, 2018 20:43:11 GMT
Can everyone now see this image? Yep ππ
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Post by flearider on Jul 20, 2018 21:06:32 GMT
My ββ76 CB750 f1 displayed from Dropbox using the method described by Naut and I. This was done from Ipad using Safari. now that's a classic.... worth about Β£12000-16000 over here atm ..
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AMO
Jul 20, 2018 21:29:22 GMT
via mobile
Post by blustnmtn on Jul 20, 2018 21:29:22 GMT
Thanks Flea! I rode it todayππ
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AMO
Jul 20, 2018 23:09:51 GMT
Post by Ratty on Jul 20, 2018 23:09:51 GMT
That graph that I now see is a marvellous graph, Missouri ... FWIW, I don't delete the "https" ..... I just change the "www" to "dl". [img alt=" " src="https://dl.dropbox.com/s/e2mf8dcc0l9f0vw/Ratty.jpg?dl=0" style="max-width:10%;"]
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Post by Ratty on Jul 20, 2018 23:19:28 GMT
Can everyone now see this image? [ Snipped hard-earned image ] Yes .... now, where were we? Not a hockey stick then?
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Post by sigurdur on Jul 21, 2018 16:10:14 GMT
link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00382-016-3179-3Results from a multiregression analysis of the global and sea surface temperature anomalies for the period 1950β2011 are presented where among the independent variables multidecade oscillation signals over various oceanic areas are included. These indices are defined in analogy with the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) index. Unexpectedly we find that a strong multidecade oscillation signal echoing the AMO is also present in the Western and Northwestern Pacific region.
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AMO
Jul 21, 2018 16:47:42 GMT
Post by nautonnier on Jul 21, 2018 16:47:42 GMT
link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00382-016-3179-3Results from a multiregression analysis of the global and sea surface temperature anomalies for the period 1950β2011 are presented where among the independent variables multidecade oscillation signals over various oceanic areas are included. These indices are defined in analogy with the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) index. Unexpectedly we find that a strong multidecade oscillation signal echoing the AMO is also present in the Western and Northwestern Pacific region. Which would seem to suggest common causation. Now what could possibly cause an oscillating signal in most of the world oceans? Any ideas Bary?
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AMO
Jul 22, 2018 15:54:52 GMT
Post by duwayne on Jul 22, 2018 15:54:52 GMT
link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00382-016-3179-3Results from a multiregression analysis of the global and sea surface temperature anomalies for the period 1950β2011 are presented where among the independent variables multidecade oscillation signals over various oceanic areas are included. These indices are defined in analogy with the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) index. Unexpectedly we find that a strong multidecade oscillation signal echoing the AMO is also present in the Western and Northwestern Pacific region. Which would seem to suggest common causation. Now what could possibly cause an oscillating signal in most of the world oceans? Any ideas Bary? Nautonnier, Judy Curry has her "Stadium Wave" theory which explains the 60-year ocean current oscillation. Has anyone put forth an ENSO prediction based on the Barycenter concept?
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AMO
Jul 22, 2018 17:55:51 GMT
Post by missouriboy on Jul 22, 2018 17:55:51 GMT
Can everyone now see this image? [ Snipped hard-earned image ] Yes .... now, where were we? Not a hockey stick then? More like a drooping putter.
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AMO
Jul 22, 2018 19:01:56 GMT
Post by nautonnier on Jul 22, 2018 19:01:56 GMT
Which would seem to suggest common causation. Now what could possibly cause an oscillating signal in most of the world oceans? Any ideas Bary? Nautonnier, Judy Curry has her "Stadium Wave" theory which explains the 60-year ocean current oscillation. Has anyone put forth an ENSO prediction based on the Barycenter concept? I don't see these observations as mutually exclusive. If there was a stable chain of events with a 60 year oscillation that is all we would see - a stable determinisic sequence We don't see this. We see events that take _on average_ so many years and which suffer perturbations. The PDO being positive increases the extent of the El Nino and vice versa. They are not connected although there will be stimuli from each to the other. We are researching a 'non-linear closely coupled chaotic system of chaotic systems' occasionally we will see a few repeats of a cycle around an attractor but they are probably purely fortuitous and are due to inputs that we may or may not recognize.
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Post by icefisher on Jul 25, 2018 4:43:09 GMT
Which would seem to suggest common causation. Now what could possibly cause an oscillating signal in most of the world oceans? Any ideas Bary? Nautonnier, Judy Curry has her "Stadium Wave" theory which explains the 60-year ocean current oscillation. Has anyone put forth an ENSO prediction based on the Barycenter concept? The theory I have outlined here is akin to the stadium wave theory but its also connected to phases in ocean temperatures resulting from stripping ice insulation off northern seas. Low ice extent in Arctic provides millions of square kilometers of open ocean to allow processes such polynyas, frazil ice, and larger refreezes supercharging super cold highly saline water getting pumped to the bottom of the arctic ocean. There has to be a hugely robust process for the cooling of ocean bottoms since they are sandwiched between a hot earth core and ocean surfaces and climates above world wide that are somewhere around 13 to 15C hotter than the ocean bottoms. The ocean oscillations have corresponded to the opening of ice in the northwest passage for the Hudson Bay Company and subsequently the first NW passage single year transit by Henry Larsen and again in the latest decade. The effects are also observable in west coast saltwater and anadromous fisheries which led to the discovery of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation in 1996. However, almost all the data regarding these processes has occurred during a period of time where a grand solar maximum was firing up and now perhaps is tailing off. When one considers that the oceans themselves might be responsible for multi-century and perhaps cycles well exceeding a thousand years we are just beginning to scratch the surface of the complexities of climate.
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AMO
Jul 25, 2018 8:27:40 GMT
Post by Ratty on Jul 25, 2018 8:27:40 GMT
[ Snip ] The theory I have outlined here is akin to the stadium wave theory but its also connected to phases in ocean temperatures resulting from stripping ice insulation off northern seas. Low ice extent in Arctic provides millions of square kilometers of open ocean to allow processes such polynyas, frazil ice, and larger refreezes supercharging super cold highly saline water getting pumped to the bottom of the arctic ocean. There has to be a hugely robust process for the cooling of ocean bottoms since they are sandwiched between a hot earth core and ocean surfaces and climates above world wide that are somewhere around 13 to 15C hotter than the ocean bottoms.The ocean oscillations have corresponded to the opening of ice in the northwest passage for the Hudson Bay Company and subsequently the first NW passage single year transit by Henry Larsen and again in the latest decade. The effects are also observable in west coast saltwater and anadromous fisheries which led to the discovery of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation in 1996. However, almost all the data regarding these processes has occurred during a period of time where a grand solar minimum was firing up and now perhaps is tailing off. When one considers that the oceans themselves might be responsible for multi-century and perhaps cycles well exceeding a thousand years we are just beginning to scratch the surface of the complexities of climate. Ice, your second paragraph? Is that temperature difference correct?
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