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#1
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Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
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#2
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
When I was 6 years old my father took me to Fels Planetarium in the Franklin Institute and I watched a film about the sun. I remember hearing how the sun was going to burn out in 6 billion years and I spent the rest of the day in abject horror.
Sort of unrelated, but I wanted to share. |
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#3
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
There was a Science channel special on some abstracticians who were postulating how advanced intelligent lifeforms might survive in space once all of the stars burned out in billions of years. It was a very dismal existence indeed. They didn't even think about the lack of light that would be like driving down a dark road with no headlights on as the civilisations traveled from place to place. ::shudder::
I think we're on a role with Energy Conservation in general, and it'd be a shame if everything got cooler for a couple of decades. If you combine some NASA photos with findings (such as evidence that ice used to be at the top of a 1000-ft plateau in Madagascar) that support the 'Snowball Earth' theory, it seems logical that climate change is happening and that it can have huge ramifications. Yet I fear the uneducated masses will use a colder year that results from a docile sunspot maximum season as evidence that climate change is a myth. |
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#4
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
Jesse,
We just don' have enough data yet. The Maunder Minimum, the longest period of no sunspot activity also coincided with the cold spell that gave Valley Forge such significance as well as all those winter scenes from northern Europe. |
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#5
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
It may be (who knows) that the sunspots, huge volcanic eruptions, etc. that produce extra-cold winters and summers are acting as counters to global warming, giving the earth a chance to recover.
It also gives those who are so inclined a chance to poke fun at certain politicians/scientists. After a May blizzard a couple years ago in SD canceled classes (seen on a white board in the student lounge): "What happened to the global warming?" or something to that effect, along with this response: "It's now called global climate change." |
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#6
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
All I know is that High-Frequency (1.6-30 MHz) radio propagation is not all that good, and I'm anxious for more sunspots so I can "work the world on a Watt" again. This time on PSK31, I suppose.
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#7
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
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Just my $0.02 Last edited by Mr. Pockets : 23-07-2009 at 23:28. |
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#8
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
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And I seem to recall that certain animals produce lots of greenhouse gasses (whatever those are ). As in, close to as much as humans do. (And there are some other things, but that would start getting way way way off-topic, so I'll leave it at that.) |
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#9
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
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Last edited by Adam Y. : 26-07-2009 at 10:59. |
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#10
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
I don't think I will convince anyone of anything, but I want to point out a few things.
One, in both politics and science, follow the money. In politics, there are people to gain by trying to get the public to agree about global warming, on both sides, but much more so on the "there is global warming side" at the moment. Recent examples of politics being played here and here. In science, it is similar. Just remember, if human caused global warming were to be proven false, lots of scientists lose their funding and their credibility. That is also true about many governmental organizations, like the IPPC. Are there people (yes, even scientists in the field) who disagree with global warming being human caused? Yes, for instance see here (letter) and here (signatures). Quote:
Take for example the main reason we post on this site, robotics. I know people who are not trained in any engineering who can design some extremely impressive robots. I have worked with technicians who understand what is going on in a process much better than an engineer does. In a company I worked for, after getting a bachelors and going into a research position for five years you were better off than the person who went to get their PhD in those five years. 1) You had experience the company valued. 2) Your five years were on-the-job like training. 3) You netted a whole lot more money than the student did. How about Henry Ford? What education did he have? Do you know why an "amateur" can sometimes be better than a "professional"? Because <i>if </i> they have worked with it, studied it, and come to an understanding of it from their own experiences outside of school, they can do just as well as others. What is that to say? There are definitely some "amateurs" out there who have opinions that should be valued. In addition, if you are reading about a subject over a period of time, you can rightfully draw conclusions when considering the debate. Are you going to be able to write a paper on it in a published journal, unlikely, though there are exceptions, particularly if there is a great insight or discovery. Quote:
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Is the earth gradually warming? Yes, but it has for the last 150-200 years since the Little Ice Age. Yes, 200 years at the rate of about a degree F every century. The real question is: is it human caused? If it is, then all of the equations to predict global warming by IPPC are off since none of their predictions line up with reality (oh, you didn't know that? ). This is one of the things that bothers me when science, money, and politics collide (and not just in regards to global warming, but other issues as well that are not on topic). The scientific method goes out the window. One piece of evidence should be enough to cause a significant reworking of the theory at the least, but when money and politics is involved, it becomes more of a tangled web.See here, here, and here (two pdfs links are linked from first link) for evidence. Let's see, current "proven" reserves of crude oil are around 50 years worth. That doesn't include shale oil (estimated 2x proven reserves), oil that is not economically/technically feasible at the moment, and crude oil that is unproven. Suffice to say, I think we have enough for a while. Your statement about it becoming too expensive might be true, but I think that will be more because a cheaper (that oil today even) technology comes along. Last edited by RMiller : 27-07-2009 at 13:48. |
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#11
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
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You don't need a degree to be able to analyze data. If I were to judge it, I'd say that most people who can finish a Sudoku puzzle have enough logic and reasoning to analyze this data. Combine that with the plethora of news, evidence, and life experiences that sway the argument either way and even Joe Sixpack can make a logical, valid argument from his perspective. |
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#12
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
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There will always a few exceptional amateurs that are competent enough in professional fields to do acceptable (or even amazing work, like Dean Kamen or your example of Henry Ford), but the vast majority of amateur people wouldn't even pass basic proficiency standards in specialized professional fields. That's why the average annual incomes of people with Bachelor degrees is higher than those without, and those with Master degrees is higher yet, with PhDs topping the charts. There will always be outliers, but this in general is the rule. Quote:
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Localized trends (over a few years) can be affected by a number of localized environmental factors. Some factors we know about - such as the case of the Mount Tambora volcano eruption in 1815 causing the Year Without a Summer in 1816 - but others we don't. In general, predicting short term weather and climate variations is much harder than predicting long term ones since more variables come into play in the short term. In the long term, the short term variations are smoothed out (very similar to the Law of Large Numbers), making longer term predictions a lot easier. Quote:
Switching from oil to more stable sources of sustainable or renewable energy (non-corn* ethanol, biodiesel, nuclear, wind, solar, hydro, geothermal, etc) results in steadier prices (e.g. wind is always free!), which results in more stable economic growth and higher profit margins for industry. Thus, weening ourselves off oil is a smart and sensible long-term goal both economically and environmentally. The problem is the short term - volatile pricing can lead to massive short term profits for shareholders and executives then lead to a period of minimal profits at best or massive red ink at worst, as the financial industry is in now. These people are more interested in sticking around for five years, getting rich, and leaving the company rather than sitting in for 20, 30, even 40 years at the company and guiding it down the path of long term, stable, moderately-high profits. * Corn is actually a pretty poor source of ethanol. Plants like plain prairie grass yield much higher returns, while not driving up the food and livestock feed prices for everyone else. Quote:
In general, pretty much everyone in society as you pointed out in a great example who can solve a Sudoku puzzle, can form qualified opinions about data, so long as they keep an open mind. Most of these decisions though, focus on a small perspective. What's directly good for them, their family, their community, their church, their friends, etc. There is nothing wrong with this, and most people live happy, satisfied lives. But sometimes their decisions have implications that don't directly affect them - such as throwing garbage into a local stream - but may have larger negative externalities on society. The water carries it away, and unless they have a personal connection to something downstream, it doesn't affect them anymore. Or what about someone who eats a lot of junk food and doesn't exercise? They seem to be happy, even though being obese leads to greater health problems, which causes health care costs across the board to increase due to more people having health problems. Do either of these make this person bad? No. In their point of view, their decisions are perfectly rational. But sometimes it's things like this where scientists, or their doctors respectively, need to give them a helping hand towards better decisions. We're all human, we all make mistakes, and we all need someone there to remind us when we begin making bad decisions. And as long as we all remember to keep an open-mind that we may be unintentionally making bad decisions, and actually change on recommendations from their doctors or other experts, we're all fine. |
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#13
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
Multiple peer reviewed scientific studies support the hypothesis that humans are accelerating global warming. The consensus in the scientific community is that humans accelerate global warming. I could link to all of the papers if you feel like analyzing them (as you shouldn't just take people's word on anything in science), but I'm sleepy right now.
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#14
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
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(If you don't know what that law is, it was debunked by Pasteur a couple hundred years ago or so.) |
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#15
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Re: Sunspot Minimum or "Is the sun going to sleep?"
I'm not a climate scientist. I haven't spent a lifetime drilling ice cores out of Antarctica, monitoring thousands of weather stations, designing complex mathematical climate forecasting algorithms, mapping the hole in the Ozone layer, recording the cyclical ocean temperatures of El Niņo, measuring the accelerated extent of the shrinking glaciers and rising sea water, or any other of the highly specialized tasks that these scientists do every day.
As such, what qualifies me as being more competent than they are at drawing conclusions from their climate data? Subjective arguments and logical fallacies? I'm not a climate scientist, or even a meteorologist. But they are. And the vast majority of them (including the IPCC) all agree that global warming is not only real and observable, but that activity from humans has been primarily responsible for this current rapid upswing. (Note they are not stating that humans are solely responsible, since climate shifts obviously occurred in the four billion years prior to humanity.) If Global Warming, which is the currently held scientific theory among the majority of scientists worldwide, works well enough for those which devote their entire lives to studying the climate, then it's good enough for me. Letting politics or personal ideas get in the way of science is like when Indiana tried to pass a law rounding pi to 3.2 to allow one to "square a circle", even though it had already been proven impossible with primitive actions. But at the same time, if enough scientists find sufficient telling evidence to refute or alter the currently held theory of global warming (which at the current time is pretty unlikely, but not impossible), and if the majority of scientists worldwide support these changes, then I'll support those alterations. Now as for the sunspots, there have been long lulls before, and subjectively they seem to line up with generic climate trends. But the only way to be sure is with data, numbers, with which we can run statistical analysis with decimal-point precision on it, and with a certain degree of confidence, make conclusions mathematically about whether sunspots have anything to do with our climate, or if it's just another textbook case of "correlation does not imply causation". |
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