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Greenhouse effect vs. Gravity - guest post by Roy Clark

Posted by Frank Lansner (frank) on 30th September, 2010
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First, Roys introduction, and below a link to his full writing in PDF format.

 

Gravity Rules Over Photons in the Greenhouse Effect:
Convection Controls the Energy Transfer through the Troposphere and Pressure Broadening Controls the LWIR Emission to Space
 
Roy Clark
 
When the atmospheric energy transfer processes related to the ‘greenhouse effect’ are examined in detail it becomes very clear that gravity controls the LWIR photon emission to space through convection and pressure broadening. The greenhouse effect has to be described in terms of a daily ‘impulse’ of convective energy rising through the atmosphere that is produced by the solar heating of the surface. This ‘resets’ the lapse rate on a daily basis depending on the local weather conditions. Convection is a mass transport process. As the air rises through the atmosphere it has to overcome the Earth’s gravitational potential. Heat is converted to mechanical work and the air cools. The thermal energy that is not used in the upward convective expansion of the air through the atmosphere is radiated into space. This LWIR radiation is produced as a result of the transition from LWIR flux exchange to a free photon flux as molecular linewidths decreases with altitude. This process is dominated by H2O because of the decrease in H2O concentration with altitude as the vapor pressure decreases with temperature. Changes in CO2 concentration of 100 ppm have no effect on the overall process of energy transfer from the surface. This is controlled by gravity through convection and molecular line narrowing, not by LWIR photons. Gravity rules the greenhouse effect through bulk thermodynamics. The resulting temperature and pressure profile – the lapse rate – controls the LWIR photon emission to space from the troposphere.
 
 
FULL WRITING

 

Last changed: 30th September, 2010 at 19:39:27

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