Matt Giwer
Banned
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2010
- Messages
- 1,518
A question for folk here more in tune with the issues than I am. My understanding is it takes a lot of energy to thaw a ton of ice. Is much of the heat energy being added due to greenhouse gasses being consumed by the melting of the polar ice instead of raising temperatures?
I hesitate to answer as your question is not framed in terms of physics. A question based upon misapprehensions cannot be answered clearly. So let me start at the top and with a very broad brush as the concepts are not always simple.
Yes it takes a lot of energy to thaw a ton of ice but it also requires losing an equal amount of energy to produce a ton of ice.
The only simple fact in glaciers is their size is determined by how much snow is added in winter against how much melts in summer. If more is added than melts they grow and vice versa.
The first complexity comes from the colder the air the less snow and thus less is added in winter. It works out that because snow depends upon the moisture capacity of the air is unrelated to the freezing and melting point a colder winter can result in retreating glaciers because the rate of winter increase is not exactly balanced by summer melting.
Of course that is not the case as we can see the difference in glaciers as we move between the poles and the equator. The problem is by this first order analysis it should not be so easily observable.
And that is because of several second order effects on top of altitude contributing.
The currently popular example is Mt. Kilimanjaro in Africa. It is almost on the equator. It as a rapidly retreating glacier. ALL the predictions regarding warming say the least effects will be at the equator yet the Kilimanjaro glaciers are retreating.
This has been explained. The windward side used to be jungle that created a lot of moisture which the winds blew to higher altitudes where it precipitated as snow. Today the windward side is farmland where a premium is on avoiding losing water to evaporation. Thus there is less added as snow but the melting is the same to the glacier retreats.
I have no interest in discouraging you as you appear to be thinking right but simply missing some basics. Formulating the question as to come before collecting the data and formulating the math. But understanding requires neither. But understanding the complexity of the problem does not imply being able to calculate an answer.
Most physics is not hard to understand it is simply different from everyday experience. The difficulty is in "separating the variables" when thinking about a problem as different from common knowledge. It is just a different way of thinking. It can be fun if you approach it right. Not all that easy but I did have one success interesting a musician type in seeing it was as much fun as understanding the foundations of composition. Admittedly only one but if you give it a try you might enjoy it.

