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Post by sigurdur on Jun 12, 2016 0:40:18 GMT
1 Joule will warm 1 gram of water 1.0C.
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Post by sigurdur on Jun 12, 2016 1:45:30 GMT
Not too good at this metric stuff.
A liter is 1,000 grams?
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Post by Ratty on Jun 12, 2016 1:50:16 GMT
Not too good at this metric stuff. A liter is 1,000 grams? Water or Vodka? Check your email ....
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Post by sigurdur on Jun 12, 2016 2:04:10 GMT
Now that you mention it Ratty, vodka sounds much more interesting!
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Post by sigurdur on Jun 12, 2016 2:06:35 GMT
1 Joule will warm 1 gram of water 1.0C. Told ya I wasn't good at this metric stuff. I totally forgot that it is 1 calorie raises the temp of 1 gram of water 1.0C. Now, how to extrapolate that to a volume of water?
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Post by nonentropic on Jun 12, 2016 2:16:06 GMT
You know MB a really solid flux of volcanic energy say 3000M down could result in an up-welling of very cold but low salinity water that could at the surface be seen as a cool patch, but it is in fact a manifestation of heat.
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Post by douglavers on Jun 12, 2016 5:33:02 GMT
When I was at school, 4.2 joules = 1 calorie.
More sophisticated climate theories have probably changed it since then.
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Post by Ratty on Jun 12, 2016 6:22:46 GMT
When I was at school, 4.2 joules = 1 calorie. More sophisticated climate theories have probably changed it since then. That is SO cynical, Doug!
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Post by douglavers on Jun 12, 2016 10:55:46 GMT
Occupational hazard for an ex investment manager [amongst my various professions],
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Post by Ratty on Jun 12, 2016 12:13:22 GMT
Occupational hazard for an ex investment manager [amongst my various professions], Wolf of Collins Street?
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Post by nautonnier on Jun 12, 2016 17:11:49 GMT
Occupational hazard for an ex investment manager [amongst my various professions], Wolf of Collins Street? Tom Collins? I don't mind if I do...
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Post by missouriboy on Jun 16, 2016 15:27:32 GMT
COMPARISON OF CENTRAL ENGLAND TEMPERATURE RECORD TO THE GEOMAGNETIC AP INDEX AND HADSST3 NE ATLANTIC SST DEVIATIONS
I went back and revisited the Central England temperature record data and compared it to the geomagnetic AP Index and HADSST3 SST deviations for the NE Atlantic Ocean. While the SST data have a nice, generalized fit to overall temperature trends, there appears to be an even nicer fit between temperatures and solar geomagnetic data ... particularly over the last 60 years. Of course, nothing is ever exact. But it's closer than CO2. The ocean likely dampens the sharpness of any effect ... thus the lag in response times.
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Post by missouriboy on Jun 20, 2016 0:00:01 GMT
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Post by sigurdur on Jun 20, 2016 5:08:15 GMT
Good find!!!!
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Post by missouriboy on Jun 20, 2016 7:18:15 GMT
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