Furcifer
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Visualized below: The "linear" increase of 1%
[qimg]http://img24.imageshack.us/img24/2824/unledta.jpg[/qimg]
whoops.
change the x axis to (%)
Visualized below: The "linear" increase of 1%
[qimg]http://img24.imageshack.us/img24/2824/unledta.jpg[/qimg]
whoops.
No it does not depend on how you label your axis. Read the example I made up:
It's a increase for each year of
The graph would have those increases. The rate of increase is not constant. It changes. Thus the increase is not linear.
- 1% then
- ~1.98% then
- ~3.88%
- and I guess then your 5.7%
This is basic mathematics.
You do not need math to see this for CO2 - all you need is a ruler to see that the slope of the graph increases from the begining to the end. See the previous posts that you are still ignoring.
lol, I suggest a refresh on basic reading thenlol, I suggest a refresh on basic math then.
Sorry, I must have missed your "wires crossed" post.Indeed it does. And the increase in ppm is not linear. That's why I said I may have got my wires crossed.
Suffice to say it is a lot (enough to account for the observed global warming).Sufficed to say it isn't much and could be worse if we weren't taking measures to decrease it. I just don't know how different it would be.
Do you?
change the x axis to (%)
So your answer to the problem of trend that isn't linear is to stop using a linear scale for the axis?

lol, I suggest a refresh on basic reading then![]()
If something increases 1%, then 1.98% then 3.88% then 5.7% then 5.8% then 5.9% then 6.0% then 6.1% then 6.2% then 6.3% the rate of increase is not constant.
Sorry, I must have missed your "wires crossed" post.
So we can both agree with everyone else in the world that the Mauna Loa data shows that the increase in CO2 is not linear as shown by the analysis of the observed results by Tamino[/URL]. It starts off at a rate of less than 1 ppmv/yr in 1960 and rises to about 2 ppmv/yr by 2010.
Suffice to say it is a lot (enough to account for the observed global warming).
I do not know how much difference the existing measures to reduce CO2 emissions have affected the increasing CO2 concentrations.
No. You're confusing logarithms with percentage.
It means about or close to.Like the word "approximate"? It means something I don't think you think it means.
No that does not have anything to do with a scatter plot or a "line of best fit". It would require a curve of best fit. That curve is obvously not a line since the rate of increase increases.No that would produce a scatter plot, which would require a "line of best fit". I mentioned this before.
It's linear at approximately 1% per year. They actually run model simulations based on this all the time.
[/q
If it were botulism 2 ppm would be a lot, as a "harmless" gas it isn't.
(see what I did there? I put harmless in quotes for a reason)
That's a problem. At least we know what our money is doing when we burn fossil fuels and release CO2. It's moving our packages and heating our homes. You can almost convert the 2ppm of CO2 released into energy and say it moved 1000 gigatons of grain or kept 4 billion people warm. The measures to reduce CO2 don't and that's a bad thing. They might be able to count the CO2 in the atmosphere but actually measuring the amount coming or not coming from a source is a whole different thing all together.
No - the data is nonlinear. The "1%" you are using is an average over the 30 years of data.It's linear at approximately 1% per year. They actually run model simulations based on this all the time.
No - the data is nonlinear. The "1%" you are using is an average over the 30 years of data.
People do run model simuations based on a average value fo CO2 increase.
*sighIt means about or close to.
The point is that the Mauna Loa CO2 data is not even approximately linear. You can see the annual variation in the data. Any straight line will not even fall within most of the annual variations.
No that does not have anything to do with a scatter plot or a "line of best fit". It would require a curve of best fit. That curve is obvously not a line since the rate of increase increases.
Anyway one of friends argument was that man made CO2 could not be the main culprit for global warming as the temperature had been cooling from the 1940s and until the mid 1970s and again since the start of the new millennium (or at least it was stagnated).
[snip]
Now my question is rather simple, what is the caused for the cooling trend from ca. 1940 until the mid-70s and then the stagnating trend in the past 10 years or so?
Man made CO2 in all those years have been rising. My guess, without knowing anything about it, is that is have something to do with the sun.
P.S.: I am sure the answer that I am looking for is buried somewhere in this thread but I am really too lazy to read through 52 pages of posts to find it.
It's linear at approximately 1% per year. They actually run model simulations based on this all the time.
If it were botulism 2 ppm would be a lot, as a "harmless" gas it isn't.
(see what I did there? I put harmless in quotes for a reason)
That's a problem. At least we know what our money is doing when we burn fossil fuels and release CO2. It's moving our packages and heating our homes. You can almost convert the 2ppm of CO2 released into energy and say it moved 1000 gigatons of grain or kept 4 billion people warm. The measures to reduce CO2 don't and that's a bad thing.
My lack of knowledge of the impact of the existing measures to reduce CO2 on the concentration of CO2 is not a problem.That's a problem. ...
No. You're confusing logarithms with percentage. A friend of mine is teaching 2nd grade, they're doing coordinates. I'm sure if they were given (1,1.8) (2,3.6) (3,5.4) they could do it. The decimals might throw them off, so (1,2) (2,4) (3,6) might be more appropriate. It might also help you to visualize what's going on here. You get the exact same linear graph if the x axis is just a plain old number or if it's (%).
I really don't know what you mean by "linear scale"? What don't you think is linear about a graph where the x-axis is labelled [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9] and not linear about a graph that is labelled [1%,2%,3%,4%,5%,6%,7%,8%,9%]![]()
a linear equation is one that plots a perfectly straight line when graphed
a non-linear equation is one that does not plot a perfectly straight line when graphed.
Global, annual CO2 emissions/accumulations of 1% per year are increasing at a non-linear rate.
My lack of knowledge of the impact of the existing measures to reduce CO2 on the concentration of CO2 is not a problem.
The problem is that that the accelerating increase in CO2 emitted by mankind is causing global temperatures to rise.
A solution is to reduce the amount of CO2 we emit.
We know what our money is doing when we burn fossil fuels and release CO2. We know what our money is doing when we burn less fossil fuels and release less CO2 (less money is spent, less CO2 is emitted, global warming reduces).
Models are run against a whole suite of projections because there is no scientific way of predicting what emissions will be in the future. No way at all with any great precision.
It's good that you've spotted the need for "approximately" but you're mis-applying it. It is approximately linear at 1% per year over few enough years. Or over far too many years for the last few decades to fill a pixel.
So you say, but what reason do we have to believe you?
You're surely not positing an entirely different, unidentified, natural source which has coincidentally manifested recently. That would be grasping at "unknown unknowns" beyond belief.

Against my will I ended up in a discussion about global warming the other night. 2 of my friends disagreed about this and the asked me about my opinion.
Now since global warming doesn't interest me that much I don't keep on the latest science and don't really know much. Anyway one of friends argument was that man made CO2 could not be the main culprit for global warming as the temperature had been cooling from the 1940s and until the mid 1970s and again since the start of the new millennium (or at least it was stagnated).
Since I was not too sure about this claim, I looked it up and according to NASA (http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/) temperature graph for the past 100 years. It looks like my friend is right about the temperature.
Now my question is rather simple, what is the caused for the cooling trend from ca. 1940 until the mid-70s and then the stagnating trend in the past 10 years or so?
Man made CO2 in all those years have been rising. My guess, without knowing anything about it, is that is have something to do with the sun.
P.S.: I am sure the answer that I am looking for is buried somewhere in this thread but I am really too lazy to read through 52 pages of posts to find it.