DaveS
Veteran
The figure you scanned is from a paper by Marsh and Svensmark:
Marsh, N., and H. Svensmark (2003), Galactic cosmic ray and El Niño–Southern Oscillation trends in International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project D2 low-cloud properties, J. Geophys. Res., 108(D6), 4195, doi:10.1029/2001JD001264.
While the low cloud correlation appears to be quite good, there are several issues that have been brought up with the analysis they performed (which I doubt Svensmark included in his book). The first is the cloud data set they used. It is from a satellite instrument called ISCCP, which obviously views clouds from above. As such it can only resolve the low clouds that they claim are correlated when they are not obscured by higher clouds. This leads to biased sampling, it is very hard to say that there has been an actual change in the low clouds, or if there has been a change in the higher clouds allowing ISCCP to see the low clouds more frequently. The second issue is that Marsh and Svensmark applied a 'correction' to the ISCCP data, that is necessary to make their correlation work. While correcting satellite data is not unheard of and is often necessary to account for changes in instrument response etc, it is generally performed by the satellite science team and not the data end user. It is awfully suspicious that Marsh and Svensmark took it on themselves to make a correction to satellite data that NOAA didn't deem necessary.
Have you got proof of that please? I am most certainly not accusing you of lying but I would like to see your source to analyse it for myself.
Finally, and on a more fundamental level, if GCR are responsible for the current warming, why is there no decreasing trend in GCR over the past 5 decades using the very same data svensmark cites:
[URL]http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/stp/SOLAR/C...YS/cosmic.html[/URL]
I am currently trying to find a graph which contains both cosmic ray levels and temperature, I think this would be better to analyse this claim in more detail. The book in question has such data over a wider timescale showing correlation but not in any great detail over the last couple of years. If I may though the initial thing I noticed in the graph was that the cosmic ray flux was quite reduced from around 1965-75. This coincides curiously with the time when temperatures were actually cooler which gave rise to the global cooling scare. It would seem at least that GCRs played a part in this.
---- To go back to CO2 GW Theory briefly - what caused the regular CO2 rises and falls with temperature in the past? It is the regularity that I'm most interested in. Also, I am concerned about how CO2 can fall that abruptly with temperature. The theory states that increased CO2 levels will cause an increased greenhouse effect which will in turn increase temperatures. However, as CO2 increases this heat will also be continually reflected back to Earth which will almost create an exponential effect; basically it is irreversible (if you listen to the News that is). What then could have caused such sharp decreases in CO2 in the past and also where did the CO2 come from in the first place?
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