Re: The planet's future: Climate change 'will cause civilisation to collapse'
miscellaneous previously posted arguments ignored...response therefore also ignored.
Oh some data! Yes, the New York Times - that hotbed of conservatism, that focal point of red state flat earth denial...
The paper you pointed out specifically notes:
So unless my English is rusty, what I understand is that low cloud cover due to ionization is not highly correlated with solar activity, but that something else is and that something is correlated with solar activity.
Oh ok. That changes everything. Not.
More of the 'AGW consensus':
http://www.climatephysics.com/GlobalWarming/APS.htm
miscellaneous previously posted arguments ignored...response therefore also ignored.
Originally posted by radon
The paper you pointed out specifically notes:
In conclusion, no corroboration of the claim of a causal connection between the changes in ionization and low cloud cover, made in [1, 2], could be found in this investigation. From the distribution of the depth of the dip in solar cycle 22 with geomagnetic latitude (the VRCO) we find that, averaged over the whole Earth, less than 23% of the dip comes from the solar modulation of the cosmic ray intensity, at the 95% confidence level. This implies that, if the dip represents a real correlation, more than 77% of it is caused by a source other than ionization and this source must be correlated with solar activity.
Oh ok. That changes everything. Not.
More of the 'AGW consensus':
http://www.climatephysics.com/GlobalWarming/APS.htm
Regarding the National Policy Statement on Climate Change of the APS Council: An Open Letter to the Council of the American Physical Society
* The statement of the APS Council, adopted on November 18, 2007 is as follows:
“Emissions of greenhouse gases from human activities are changing the atmosphere in ways that affect the Earth's climate. Greenhouse gases include carbon dioxide as well as methane, nitrous oxide and other gases. They are emitted from fossil fuel combustion and a range of industrial and agricultural processes.
The evidence is incontrovertible: Global warming is occurring. If no mitigating actions are taken, significant disruptions in the Earth’s physical and ecological systems, social systems, security and human health are likely to occur. We must reduce emissions of greenhouse gases beginning now.
Because the complexity of the climate makes accurate prediction difficult, the APS urges an enhanced effort to understand the effects of human activity on the Earth’s climate, and to provide the technological options for meeting the climate challenge in the near and longer terms. The APS also urges governments, universities, national laboratories and its membership to support policies and actions that will reduce the emission of greenhouse gases.”
— APS News; January 2008 (Volume 17, Number 1)Harold M. Agnew
Director, Los Alamos National Laboratory (1970 - 1979)
President, General Atomics Corporation (1979 -1984)
White House Science Councilor (1982 -1989)
E.O. Lawrence Award 1966, Enrico Fermi Award 1978, Los Alamos Medal (with H.A. Bethe) 2001
Member National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Fellow APS, AAAS
Moorad Alexanian
Professor of Physics and Physical Oceanography
University of North Carolina Wilmington
Member Mexican Academy of Sciences, American Scientific Affiliation
Robert H. Austin
Professor of Physics
Princeton Universityy
Fellow APS, AAAS; APS Council: 1991-1994, 2007-2010
Member National Academy of Sciences, American Association of Arts and Sciences
Franco Battaglia, PhD
Professor of Chemical Physics and Environmental Chemistry
University of Modena, Italy
APS Life-member
Stuart B. Berger
Research Fellow and Divisional Time-to-Market Manager
Xerox Corporation (retired)
Barry L. Berman
Columbian Professor and Chair
Physics Department
The George Washington University
Fellow APS
Edwin X Berry
Atmospheric Physicist, Climate Physics, LLC
Certified Consulting Meteorologist #180
Member American Meteorological Society
Arie Bodek
George E. Pake Professor of Physics
University of Rochester
Wolfgang K. H. Panofsky Prize in Experimental Particle Physics (APS) 2004
Fellow APS
Timothy D. Calvin
President, Bearfoot Corporation (retired)
Fabricated rubber products for the DOD, shoe and automobile industries
Member ACS
Gregory H. Canavan
Senior Fellow and Scientific Advisor,
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Fellow APS
Roger W. Cohen
Manager, Strategic Planning and Programs
ExxonMobil Corporation (retired)
Otto Schade Prize (Society for Information Display) 2006
Fellow APS
Jerry M. Cuttler
President, Cuttler and Associates, Inc.
Engineering, consulting, and licensing services for the nuclear power industry
President, Canadian Nuclear Society 1995-1996
Fellow Canadian Nuclear Society, Member American Nuclear Society
David H. Douglass
Professor of Physics
University of Rochester
Fellow APS
Albert G. Engelhardt
President and CEO, Enfitek, Inc.
Environmental control and security systems
Senior Life Member IEEE
Jens G. Feder
Professor of Physics of Geological Processes
University of Oslo
Fellow APS
Peter D. Friedman
Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering
University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Member American Geophysical Union, ASME, American Nuclear Society
Ivar Giaever
Institute Professor, School of Engineering and School of Science
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Nobel Prize in Physics 1973
Fellow APS, Member National Academy of Science, National Academy of Engineering
Albert Gold
Associate Dean of Engineering and Applied Sciences (Retired)
Harvard University
Laurence I. Gould
Professor of Physics
University of Hartford
Member Executive Board of the New England Section of the APS
Chairman (2004), New England Section APS
Paul M. Grant
EPRI Science Fellow (retired)
IBM Research Staff Member Emeritus
Senior Life Fellow APS
Howard D. Greyber
University of Pennsylvania (retired)
Formerly Princeton University, LLNL Theory Group, Northeastern University
Member American Astronomical Society, Fellow Royal Astronomical Society
Mike Gruntman
Professor of AstronauticsUniversity of Southern California
Author, Blazing the Trail. The Early History of Spacecraft and Rocketry (AIAA)
Luigi G. Napolitano Book Award (International Academy of Astronautics) 2006
Member American Geophysical Union, Associate Fellow AIAA
William Happer
Cyrus Fogg Brackett Professor of Physics
Princeton University
Fellow APS, AAAS
Member National Academy of Sciences
Howard C. Hayden
Emeritus Professor of Physics
University of Connecticut
Editor, The Energy Advocate
Jack M. Hollander
Professor Emeritus of Energy and Resources, University of California, Berkeley
Vice-President Emeritus, The Ohio State University
First Head, Energy and Environment Division, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
Fellow APS, AAAS
David B. Holtkamp
Scientific Staff Member, Physics Division
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Andrew Kaldor
Distinguished Scientific Advisor
Manager of Breakthrough Research
ExxonMobil Corporation (retired)
Fellow AAAS, Member ACS
Alexander E. Kaplan
Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
The Johns Hopkins University
Max Born Award (Optical Society of America) 2005
Alexander von Humboldt Award (von Humboldt Foundation) 1996
Fellow OSA
Jonathan Katz
Professor of Physics
Washington University
Robert S. Knox
Professor of Physics Emeritus
University of Rochester
Member APS Council (1985-1988)
Fellow APS
Joseph A. Kunc
Professor, Physics and Astronomy
University of Southern California
Fellow APS
Robert E. Levine
Industrial and Defense Physics and Engineering (retired)
Member ACM, IEEE
Harold W. Lewis
Professor of Physics Emeritus
University of California at Santa Barbara
Chairman, Defense Science Board Panel on Nuclear Winter
Fellow APS, AAAS; Chairman, APS Reactor Safety Study
John D. Lindl
James Clerk Maxwell Prize for Plasma Physics (APS) 2007
Fellow APS, AAAS
Phillip W. Mange
Associate Superintendent, Space Science Division
Scientific Consultant to the Director of Research,
Naval Research Laboratory (retired)
Jim Mitroy
Lecturer in Physics, School of Engineering and Information Technology
Charles Darwin University, Australia
Michael Monce
Professor of Physics, Astronomy, and Geophysics
Connecticut College
Member AAPT, and American Geophysical Union
Rodney W. Nichols
President and CEO, New York Academy of Sciences (1992-2001)
Vice President and Executive Vice President, The Rockefeller University (1970-1990)
Secretary of Defense Medal for Distinguished Meritorious Civilian Service (1970)
Fellow AAAS, New York Academy of Sciences
Frank R. Paolini
Adjunct Professor of Physics
University of Connecticut at Stamford (retired)
Senior Member APS, Member IEEE
Donald Rapp
Chief Technologist, Mechanical and Chemical Systems,
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (retired)Professor of Physics and Environmental Engineering, University of Texas (1973-1979)
Author, “Assessing Climate Change” and “Ice Ages and Interglacials” (Springer-Verlag)
Fellow APS
John E. Rhoads
Professor of Physics
Midwestern State University (retired)
Member SPE
Harry I. Ringermacher
Sr. Research Physicist
General Electric Global Research Center
AIP "History of Physics in Industry" Participant at GE
Sir William Herschel Medal (American Academy of Thermology)
Copper Black Award (American Mensa) 2003 and 2007
Stanley Robertson
Emeritus Professor of Physics
Southwestern Oklahoma State University
Berol Robinson
Principal Scientific Officer
UNESCO (retired)Member AAPT, AAAS, Association des Écologistes Pour le Nucléaire
Nicola Scafetta
Research Scientist, Physics Department, Duke University
Member American Geophysical Union
Thomas P. Sheahen
President/ CEO, Western Technology, Inc. (energy sciences consulting)
Member AAAS; APS Congressional Science Fellowship (1977-78)Author, Introduction to High Temperature Superconductivity (Springer)
Joseph Silverman
Professor Emeritus of Nuclear Engineering,
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
University of Maryland
Fellow APS, ANS
S. Fred Singer
Professor of Environmental Sciences Emeritus
University of Virginia
First Director of the National Weather Satellite Service
Fellow APS, AAAS, American Geophysical Union
Peter Stilbs
Professor of Physical Chemistry
Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm, Sweden
Life Member APS
Szymon Suckewer
Professor of School of Engineering & Applied Sciences
Director of Plasma Science & Technology Program
Princeton University
Fellow APS, OSA
Frank J. Tipler
Professor of Mathematical Physics
Tulane University
Co-author, The Anthropic Cosmological Principle (Oxford U. Press)
Salvatore Torquato
Professor of Chemistry and the Princeton Center for Theoretical Science,
Materials Institute and Applied & Computational Mathematics
Princeton University
Fellow APS; 2009 APS David Alder Lectureship Award in the Field of Material Physics
Samuel A. Werner
Curators’ Professor Emeritus
The University of Missouri
Guest Researcher, NIST
Fellow APS, AAAS
Bruce J. West
Adjunct Professor of Physics, Duke University
Fellow APS
As physicists who are familiar with the science issues, and as current and past members of the American Physical Society, we the undersigned urge the Council to revise its current statement* on climate change as follows, so as to more accurately represent the current state of the science:
Greenhouse gas emissions, such as carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide, accompany human industrial and agricultural activity. While substantial concern has been expressed that emissions may cause significant climate change, measured or reconstructed temperature records indicate that 20th - 21st century changes are neither exceptional nor persistent, and the historical and geological records show many periods warmer than today. In addition, there is an extensive scientific literature that examines beneficial effects of increased levels of carbon dioxide for both plants and animals.
Studies of a variety of natural processes, including ocean cycles and solar variability, indicate that they can account for variations in the Earth’s climate on the time scale of decades and centuries. Current climate models appear insufficiently reliable to properly account for natural and anthropogenic contributions to past climate change, much less project future climate.
The APS supports an objective scientific effort to understand the effects of all processes – natural and human -- on the Earth’s climate and the biosphere’s response to climate change, and promotes technological options for meeting challenges of future climate changes, regardless of cause.
Studies of a variety of natural processes, including ocean cycles and solar variability, indicate that they can account for variations in the Earth’s climate on the time scale of decades and centuries. Current climate models appear insufficiently reliable to properly account for natural and anthropogenic contributions to past climate change, much less project future climate.
The APS supports an objective scientific effort to understand the effects of all processes – natural and human -- on the Earth’s climate and the biosphere’s response to climate change, and promotes technological options for meeting challenges of future climate changes, regardless of cause.
* The statement of the APS Council, adopted on November 18, 2007 is as follows:
“Emissions of greenhouse gases from human activities are changing the atmosphere in ways that affect the Earth's climate. Greenhouse gases include carbon dioxide as well as methane, nitrous oxide and other gases. They are emitted from fossil fuel combustion and a range of industrial and agricultural processes.
The evidence is incontrovertible: Global warming is occurring. If no mitigating actions are taken, significant disruptions in the Earth’s physical and ecological systems, social systems, security and human health are likely to occur. We must reduce emissions of greenhouse gases beginning now.
Because the complexity of the climate makes accurate prediction difficult, the APS urges an enhanced effort to understand the effects of human activity on the Earth’s climate, and to provide the technological options for meeting the climate challenge in the near and longer terms. The APS also urges governments, universities, national laboratories and its membership to support policies and actions that will reduce the emission of greenhouse gases.”
— APS News; January 2008 (Volume 17, Number 1)
Director, Los Alamos National Laboratory (1970 - 1979)
President, General Atomics Corporation (1979 -1984)
White House Science Councilor (1982 -1989)
E.O. Lawrence Award 1966, Enrico Fermi Award 1978, Los Alamos Medal (with H.A. Bethe) 2001
Member National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Fellow APS, AAAS
Moorad Alexanian
Professor of Physics and Physical Oceanography
University of North Carolina Wilmington
Member Mexican Academy of Sciences, American Scientific Affiliation
Robert H. Austin
Professor of Physics
Princeton Universityy
Fellow APS, AAAS; APS Council: 1991-1994, 2007-2010
Member National Academy of Sciences, American Association of Arts and Sciences
Franco Battaglia, PhD
Professor of Chemical Physics and Environmental Chemistry
University of Modena, Italy
APS Life-member
Stuart B. Berger
Research Fellow and Divisional Time-to-Market Manager
Xerox Corporation (retired)
Barry L. Berman
Columbian Professor and Chair
Physics Department
The George Washington University
Fellow APS
Edwin X Berry
Atmospheric Physicist, Climate Physics, LLC
Certified Consulting Meteorologist #180
Member American Meteorological Society
Arie Bodek
George E. Pake Professor of Physics
University of Rochester
Wolfgang K. H. Panofsky Prize in Experimental Particle Physics (APS) 2004
Fellow APS
Timothy D. Calvin
President, Bearfoot Corporation (retired)
Fabricated rubber products for the DOD, shoe and automobile industries
Member ACS
Gregory H. Canavan
Senior Fellow and Scientific Advisor,
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Fellow APS
Roger W. Cohen
Manager, Strategic Planning and Programs
ExxonMobil Corporation (retired)
Otto Schade Prize (Society for Information Display) 2006
Fellow APS
Jerry M. Cuttler
President, Cuttler and Associates, Inc.
Engineering, consulting, and licensing services for the nuclear power industry
President, Canadian Nuclear Society 1995-1996
Fellow Canadian Nuclear Society, Member American Nuclear Society
David H. Douglass
Professor of Physics
University of Rochester
Fellow APS
Albert G. Engelhardt
President and CEO, Enfitek, Inc.
Environmental control and security systems
Senior Life Member IEEE
Jens G. Feder
Professor of Physics of Geological Processes
University of Oslo
Fellow APS
Peter D. Friedman
Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering
University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Member American Geophysical Union, ASME, American Nuclear Society
Ivar Giaever
Institute Professor, School of Engineering and School of Science
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Nobel Prize in Physics 1973
Fellow APS, Member National Academy of Science, National Academy of Engineering
Albert Gold
Associate Dean of Engineering and Applied Sciences (Retired)
Harvard University
Laurence I. Gould
Professor of Physics
University of Hartford
Member Executive Board of the New England Section of the APS
Chairman (2004), New England Section APS
Paul M. Grant
EPRI Science Fellow (retired)
IBM Research Staff Member Emeritus
Senior Life Fellow APS
Howard D. Greyber
University of Pennsylvania (retired)
Formerly Princeton University, LLNL Theory Group, Northeastern University
Member American Astronomical Society, Fellow Royal Astronomical Society
Mike Gruntman
Professor of AstronauticsUniversity of Southern California
Author, Blazing the Trail. The Early History of Spacecraft and Rocketry (AIAA)
Luigi G. Napolitano Book Award (International Academy of Astronautics) 2006
Member American Geophysical Union, Associate Fellow AIAA
William Happer
Cyrus Fogg Brackett Professor of Physics
Princeton University
Fellow APS, AAAS
Member National Academy of Sciences
Howard C. Hayden
Emeritus Professor of Physics
University of Connecticut
Editor, The Energy Advocate
Jack M. Hollander
Professor Emeritus of Energy and Resources, University of California, Berkeley
Vice-President Emeritus, The Ohio State University
First Head, Energy and Environment Division, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
Fellow APS, AAAS
David B. Holtkamp
Scientific Staff Member, Physics Division
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Andrew Kaldor
Distinguished Scientific Advisor
Manager of Breakthrough Research
ExxonMobil Corporation (retired)
Fellow AAAS, Member ACS
Alexander E. Kaplan
Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
The Johns Hopkins University
Max Born Award (Optical Society of America) 2005
Alexander von Humboldt Award (von Humboldt Foundation) 1996
Fellow OSA
Jonathan Katz
Professor of Physics
Washington University
Robert S. Knox
Professor of Physics Emeritus
University of Rochester
Member APS Council (1985-1988)
Fellow APS
Joseph A. Kunc
Professor, Physics and Astronomy
University of Southern California
Fellow APS
Robert E. Levine
Industrial and Defense Physics and Engineering (retired)
Member ACM, IEEE
Harold W. Lewis
Professor of Physics Emeritus
University of California at Santa Barbara
Chairman, Defense Science Board Panel on Nuclear Winter
Fellow APS, AAAS; Chairman, APS Reactor Safety Study
John D. Lindl
James Clerk Maxwell Prize for Plasma Physics (APS) 2007
Fellow APS, AAAS
Phillip W. Mange
Associate Superintendent, Space Science Division
Scientific Consultant to the Director of Research,
Naval Research Laboratory (retired)
Jim Mitroy
Lecturer in Physics, School of Engineering and Information Technology
Charles Darwin University, Australia
Michael Monce
Professor of Physics, Astronomy, and Geophysics
Connecticut College
Member AAPT, and American Geophysical Union
Rodney W. Nichols
President and CEO, New York Academy of Sciences (1992-2001)
Vice President and Executive Vice President, The Rockefeller University (1970-1990)
Secretary of Defense Medal for Distinguished Meritorious Civilian Service (1970)
Fellow AAAS, New York Academy of Sciences
Frank R. Paolini
Adjunct Professor of Physics
University of Connecticut at Stamford (retired)
Senior Member APS, Member IEEE
Donald Rapp
Chief Technologist, Mechanical and Chemical Systems,
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (retired)Professor of Physics and Environmental Engineering, University of Texas (1973-1979)
Author, “Assessing Climate Change” and “Ice Ages and Interglacials” (Springer-Verlag)
Fellow APS
John E. Rhoads
Professor of Physics
Midwestern State University (retired)
Member SPE
Harry I. Ringermacher
Sr. Research Physicist
General Electric Global Research Center
AIP "History of Physics in Industry" Participant at GE
Sir William Herschel Medal (American Academy of Thermology)
Copper Black Award (American Mensa) 2003 and 2007
Stanley Robertson
Emeritus Professor of Physics
Southwestern Oklahoma State University
Berol Robinson
Principal Scientific Officer
UNESCO (retired)Member AAPT, AAAS, Association des Écologistes Pour le Nucléaire
Nicola Scafetta
Research Scientist, Physics Department, Duke University
Member American Geophysical Union
Thomas P. Sheahen
President/ CEO, Western Technology, Inc. (energy sciences consulting)
Member AAAS; APS Congressional Science Fellowship (1977-78)Author, Introduction to High Temperature Superconductivity (Springer)
Joseph Silverman
Professor Emeritus of Nuclear Engineering,
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
University of Maryland
Fellow APS, ANS
S. Fred Singer
Professor of Environmental Sciences Emeritus
University of Virginia
First Director of the National Weather Satellite Service
Fellow APS, AAAS, American Geophysical Union
Peter Stilbs
Professor of Physical Chemistry
Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm, Sweden
Life Member APS
Szymon Suckewer
Professor of School of Engineering & Applied Sciences
Director of Plasma Science & Technology Program
Princeton University
Fellow APS, OSA
Frank J. Tipler
Professor of Mathematical Physics
Tulane University
Co-author, The Anthropic Cosmological Principle (Oxford U. Press)
Salvatore Torquato
Professor of Chemistry and the Princeton Center for Theoretical Science,
Materials Institute and Applied & Computational Mathematics
Princeton University
Fellow APS; 2009 APS David Alder Lectureship Award in the Field of Material Physics
Samuel A. Werner
Curators’ Professor Emeritus
The University of Missouri
Guest Researcher, NIST
Fellow APS, AAAS
Bruce J. West
Adjunct Professor of Physics, Duke University
Fellow APS
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