you are viewing a single comment's thread.

view the rest of the comments →

[–]zyxzevn 2 insightful - 3 fun2 insightful - 2 fun3 insightful - 3 fun -  (1 child)

The global temperatures and weather cycles are mainly related to the sun.
The pollution and deforestation and such have immense damage as well, but do not have that much of an impact on the global climate.

The sun is not constant at all, and we differences in climate on every Mars as well. The radiation from the sun varies a lot, but not that much on the frequency that is used in official climate reports. The energy of x-ray outbursts is immense, and absorbed high in the atmosphere.

Only the last 10 years we have discovered that the solar wind contributes a lot to the temperature. A solar storm can heat up the planet for +4 C for several days. The solar wind also fuels the jet-streams, which in their turn cause the hurricanes. This has been known for ages, but was never understood.

The solar wind (Solar Particle Forcing) is like a continuous stream of hot particles that enter the atmosphere. During solar magnetic storms this continuous wind becomes turbulent and does not stream as well. So at those times the Earth cools down.

This knowledge can be used to do more accurate weather predictions, but is not used, because it debunks the climate change agenda.

[–]FediNetizen 1 insightful - 1 fun1 insightful - 0 fun2 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

The global temperatures and weather cycles are mainly related to the sun.

Lol, no the fuck they aren't. We've been directly measuring solar output directly for decades now. The main fluctuations are the 11-year cycle, but overall output has actually decreased slightly, and is expected to decrease a bit more for a while as the evidence indicates that we might be entering a Grand Solar Minimum.

But these are small fluctuations, on the order of tens or hundredths of a percent of total output. While this would slightly reduce the overall temp increases we're seeing from the strengthened greenhouse effect resulting from all the greenhouse gases we're putting into the atmosphere (mainly CO2), the ~1C warming we've seen over the last century is most certainly not because of the sun.