PDA

View Full Version : The Climate is seriously wrong and here is the reason why.



old steel
15th May 2014, 09:48 PM
Sun Flatlining Into Grand Minimum, Says Solar Physicist


With each passing season, the weather seems stranger and more extreme.
Who can argue with a sudden outbreak of the “polar vortex” phenomenon; unprecedented winter drought in California; and summer temperatures so torrid Down Under that even play at the Australian Open was briefly halted?
Is any of this connected to the sun’s drastically diminished recent sunspot cycles?

Weather isn’t climate, but circumstantial evidence indicates our sun may be entering a grand minimum of sunspot activity, not unlike the Maunder Minimum that some climatologists think caused record low winter temperatures in Northern Europe (http://www.forbes.com/europe-news/) during the latter half of the 17th century.
“My opinion is that we are heading into a Maunder Minimum,” (https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?url=http%3A%2F%2Fonforb.es%2F1cKyIk8&text=%E2%80%9CMy%20opinion%20is%20that%20we%20are% 20heading%20into%20a%20Maunder%20Minimum%2C%E2%80% 9D) said Mark Giampapa, a solar physicist at the National Solar Observatory (NSO) in Tucson, Arizona. “I’m seeing a continuation in the decline of the sunspots’ mean magnetic field strengths and a weakening of the polar magnetic fields and subsurface flows.”
Theoretical details of how sunspots are actually produced continue to be debated. But one popular idea is that they are generated as the result of concentrated and twisted solar magnetic fields blocking internal convection in the outer third of the sun’s interior. This, in turn, gives the sunspots their dark appearance, since on average they are 2000 degrees cooler than the surrounding solar plasma.



http://blogs-images.forbes.com/brucedorminey/files/2014/04/350px-sunspot_10981_solar_cycle_24.jpg First official sunspot belonging to the Solar Cycle 24. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


These solar magnetic fields are thought to be triggered by the sun’s own internal “differential rotation.” That is, the fact that at various latitudes and depths, the sun’s gaseous plasma rotates at different rates. Then once these fields are produced, some theorists think it’s their interaction at the sun’s photosphere (or surface) that plays a crucial role in sunspot creation.
Even so, David Hathaway, a solar physicist at NASA Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, says it’s the actual strength of such magnetic field at the end of a given maximum 11-year sunspot cycle that are thought to act as bellwethers for the size and strength of the next solar maximum.
“At the end of a sunspot cycle about all you have left are magnetic fields at the solar poles,” said Hathaway. “We’re at the sunspot maximum of Cycle 24. It’s the smallest sunspot cycle in 100 years and the third in a trend of diminishing sunspot cycles. So, Cycle 25 could likely be smaller than Cycle 24.”
Another indicator pointing to an imminent grand minimum is that the current solar cycle shows some signs of hemispheric asymmetry, says Steve Tobias, an applied mathematician at the University of Leeds in the U.K.
“When the field is about to enter a minimum or is leaving a minimum,” said Tobias, “we see more sunspots in one solar hemisphere than the other.”
Yet during the 1645 — 1715 Maunder Minimum itself, sunspots basically disappeared and as documented in paintings from the era, Northern Europe suffered unusually cold winter temperatures.
Such minima are thought to be a part of the normal life of a sunlike star, however. And from recent surveys of several solar analogues in the open stellar cluster M67, Giampapa and colleagues see indications that such grand minima take place up to 15 percent of the time.
Hathaway says that the observed effects of the sunspot cycle in radioisotopes; in ice cores; and in tree rings indicate that some 10 to 15 percent of the time the sun is in “something like a Maunder Minimum.”
http://blogs-images.forbes.com/brucedorminey/files/2014/04/bruegel-300x213.jpg This Bruegel painting “The Hunters in the Snow” is reminiscent of winter landscapes typical in Northern Europe during the Maunder Minimum. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

“If we’re entering a Maunder Minimum, it could persist until the 2080s,” said Giampapa, who points out that if such a minimum’s primary effect is cooling, it could wreak havoc by curtailing agricultural growing seasons which, for instance, could lead to lower wheat production in breadbasket economies.
But Giampapa says it could also mean a global excursion from the mean, resulting in local climate extremes in terms of both anomalous temperatures and precipitation.
Could a Maunder Minimum mitigate a warming climate?
Not likely, says Hathaway.
Although the rise of global temperatures seen in “the last decade or so seems to have currently leveled off,” says Hathaway, he notes that even a Maunder Minimum would still not be enough to counter the warming effects of anthropogenic climate change.
If anything, a Maunder Minimum may simply make existing weather and short term climate even more unusual and difficult to predict.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/brucedorminey/2014/01/20/sun-flatlining-into-grand-minimum-says-solar-physicist/

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/01/19/bbc-runs-6-excellent-minutes-on-quiet-sun-and-past-correlation-with-little-ice-age/

Use a search engine for "mini ice age 2014".

old steel
15th May 2014, 09:54 PM
All this at the peak of the Solar Cycle 24 where the Sun is expected to be most active.

Better get ready for what this will mean for our very near future, as in this year.

old steel
15th May 2014, 10:37 PM
Of course this could all be a smoke screen and our incredibly chaotic weather could be due to their geo engineering of the planet.

Here we are preparing for global economic collapse when what we are really looking at is global ecosystem collapse.

Horn
15th May 2014, 10:59 PM
Its currently 2^C in Waukegan Illinois.

What they are missing is the solar pumps effect on Earth's atmosphere, imo.

We have been in a condensed atmospheric cycle since 2010. Even in Nicaragua this past week (peak sun season) the temp drops rapidly after sun down. But yes you are dealing with heavy humidity soup afterwards.

singular_me
16th May 2014, 04:25 AM
climate change will be blamed as one of the culprits...


Of course this could all be a smoke screen and our incredibly chaotic weather could be due to their geo engineering of the planet.

Here we are preparing for global economic collapse when what we are really looking at is global ecosystem collapse.

StreetsOfGold
16th May 2014, 09:07 AM
The trees that go into full bloom around my house have been around mid April for the last 20+ years.
This year the full bloom date was May 11 - It's been rather cool for the most part and there is no doubt there is some climate differences.

Horn
16th May 2014, 08:39 PM
Posted: Friday, May 16, 2014 4:53 pm

Michigan weather has not been kind to Genesee County farmers so far this year. Dwight Eichelberg of Eichelberg Farms in Fenton Township said this month has been the worst start for field crops he’s had in his 30-plus years of farming.
 “It’s going to be no farming for a week and a half. The rain sets me back about two weeks,” said Eichelberg, who tends to corn, green beans, strawberries and tomatoes during the summer months. “I have to wait it out, there’s nothing I can do. I have a friend in Saginaw who didn’t get hurt at all. His corn is already 7 inches tall.”
 As of Thursday, Weather Underground reports Michigan has received more than 3.5 inches of rain, with more expected to follow this weekend. For local field crop farmers, the excessive rain is worse than blistering heat. The washed out soil is keeping seeds from being planted and, if the weather continues, farmers will have to deal with a shorter grow season this year.
 “The combination of rain and lack of heat doesn’t dry things up so well,” said Jennifer Griffin, administrative manager for the Genesee County Farm Bureau. Other farmers have told Griffin that this May has been the worst they’ve seen for farming conditions. “It’s not a good situation.”
 The Farmers Almanac predicted that April and May would be warmer with more rain than previous years. The almanac also predicts rain to continue through June, with above average temperatures coming in July and a drop in precipitation. So far, the annual guide for farmers is on key.
 Previous summers in Michigan have ranged from bountiful to dire for farmers. In 2012, a devastating drought hit most of America, causing fruit producers like Mueller’s Orchard in Fenton Township to shut down for the season. Last summer, cooler weather and relatively normal levels of rain allowed farmers to bounce back from an unproductive season.
 This year, farmers will have to wait out the rain before they get any seeds into the ground.
 “It’s hard to speculate the weather. It must improve in the next few weeks, since corn has to be planted by June 5,” said Chad Morey of Morey Farms in Swartz Creek. “Our spring weather is still a symptom of the cold, above precipitation of the winter we just had.”
 Morey may be on point citing this past winter as the reason for the colder, wetter spring. According to NOAA Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory, the Great Lakes were still frozen into the start of spring, keeping arctic air cooler than normal. The ice also reflected a large amount of sunlight, possibly keeping Michigan cooler than usual.
 For Morey and other farmers, the weather has to dry up soon or corn and other crops won’t come until the middle or possibly end of June.
 “There’s been other years like this but I can’t recall a spring where we have not been able to plant,” Morey said. “We’re still optimistic the good weather will bless us soon.”
http://www.tctimes.com/news/extreme-rain-and-lack-of-heat-delaying-farmers-season/article_39f2318a-dd3c-11e3-86bd-001a4bcf887a.html

Cebu_4_2
17th May 2014, 09:33 AM
But no mention of this...

http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/01116/chemtrails_1116768i.jpg

http://www.google.com/url?sa=i&source=images&cd=&docid=KlVSAyaGL21wvM&tbnid=vETZTTAb7mK6cM:&ved=0CAUQjBw&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.metabunk.org%2Fattachments%2 Fcontrailstudy-jpg.1150%2F&ei=qo13U9GoD86XqAaJm4DwDw&psig=AFQjCNHPd3_qANNoQ_aQnb_Gjkrjo5ZzGQ&ust=1400430378350414

http://www.chronicle.su/wp-content/uploads/chemtrail-hell.jpg

http://wilkesbarrescranton.muckrakerinc.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/7/2013/09/Toxic-Skies-1.jpg

http://socalskywatch.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/20111002sup0521sandiego.jpg