Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
Friday, April 15, 2016
HERE COMES THE SUN
Live from the dropbox of Professor Oliver K. Manuel, uncontested Climate Etc. First Commenter, Greatest Living Bishop Hill contributor, Former Chairman of the Chemistry Department of the illustrious University of Missouri at Rollo, and coauthor of
First, a few words from Prof. Manuel:
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/10640850/Solar_Energy2.pdf
Which for some unfathomable reason, the Editors of Natur Climate Change have declined to review for publication.
Slaying the Sky Dragon, comes another epochal contribution to Nature Climate Change.
First, a few words from Prof. Manuel:
Thank you for helping the public retain some contact with reality despite all the false government propaganda about AGW, the latest and final act of deception from the giant, worldwide "Orwellian Ministry of Consensus Science (UN)Truths" that Stalin created by combining formerly independent national academies of science (NAS) on October 24, 1945 in order to prohibit public knowledge of the powerful source of energy in cores of:1. Heavy atoms, like Uranium2. Ordinary stars like the Sun3. Some planets, like Jupiter4. Galaxies like the Milky Way5. The expanding Universe, . . . NEUTRON REPULSION ! Neutron Repulsion: The force of creation, destruction, preservation and redemptionCHAOS and FEAR of events during a NEWS blackout in Aug-Sept 1945 transformed science into a propaganda tool of world tyrants:https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/10640850/CHAOS_and_FEAR.pdfFrightened world leaders secretly agreed to unite nations (UN) and national academies of science (NAS) into a worldwide "Orwellian Ministry of Consensus Science (UN)Truths" to prevent public knowledge of the source of energy in cores of heavy atoms on October 24, 1945...
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/10640850/Solar_Energy.pdfThanks to Max Planck's 1944 insight into the nature of matter, we now have assurance humanity will survive this seventy-year (1945-2015) effort to take totalitarian control of the globe by combining all sovereign nations into one United Nation.
Submitted to Nature Climate Change, 15 Mar 2016, Ms # NCLIM-16030433
Solar Energy
Oliver K. Manuel
Climate and Solar Science Institute and Former NASA PI for Apollo, Univ. Missouri 833 Broadway, Cape Girardeau, MO 73701 USA, Email: omatumr2@gmail.com
Abstract: The source of energy in the core of the Sun is neutron repulsion, the same source of energy in cores of the uranium and plutonium atoms that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki on 6 and 9 August 1945, respectively. The Sun is an ordinary star that produces and discards hydrogen generated by neutron-emission followed, in succession, by neutron-decay. This conclusion is based on precise measurements of meteorites, planets, the Moon and the Sun during the space age and on precise atomic rest mass data. It assumes that free neutrons decay spontaneously into hydrogen atoms and that solar energy arises from the conversion of nuclear rest mass (m) into solar energy (E).
1. Introduction
I am grateful for the invitation to submit this review on neutron repulsion as the source of solar energy. The manuscript is based primarily on the work of two great scientists that participated on opposing sides of the Second World War and then died in 2001.
The astronomer, astrophysicist and cosmologist, Sir Fred Hoyle (1915-2001), led a radar development group for the British during WWII and later left unambiguous hints in his 1994 autobiography [1] of inexplicable, sudden changes in the foundations of these major fields of science in 1946.
The nuclear geochemist, Paul Kazuo Kuroda aka Kazuo Kuroda (1917-2001), was more circumspect in leaving hints in the description of his life as a graduate student and then as a faculty member at the Imperial University of Tokyo, studying radium, radon and other trace elements in hot springs and later extracting uranium from Manchurian euxenite ore for Japan during WWII [2].
Kuroda became my research mentor in 1960 and assigned this research project: "The Origin of the Solar System and Its Elements." This paper includes many of the research findings summarized in my biography, in progress [3]. After Kazuo Kuroda's death, BBC News reported [4] his widow returned secret atomic bomb plans missing from Japan for fifty-seven years (2002 - 1945 = 57 years).
Oliver K. Manuel
Climate and Solar Science Institute and Former NASA PI for Apollo, Univ. Missouri 833 Broadway, Cape Girardeau, MO 73701 USA, Email: omatumr2@gmail.com
Abstract: The source of energy in the core of the Sun is neutron repulsion, the same source of energy in cores of the uranium and plutonium atoms that destroyed Hiroshima and Nagasaki on 6 and 9 August 1945, respectively. The Sun is an ordinary star that produces and discards hydrogen generated by neutron-emission followed, in succession, by neutron-decay. This conclusion is based on precise measurements of meteorites, planets, the Moon and the Sun during the space age and on precise atomic rest mass data. It assumes that free neutrons decay spontaneously into hydrogen atoms and that solar energy arises from the conversion of nuclear rest mass (m) into solar energy (E).
1. Introduction
I am grateful for the invitation to submit this review on neutron repulsion as the source of solar energy. The manuscript is based primarily on the work of two great scientists that participated on opposing sides of the Second World War and then died in 2001.
The astronomer, astrophysicist and cosmologist, Sir Fred Hoyle (1915-2001), led a radar development group for the British during WWII and later left unambiguous hints in his 1994 autobiography [1] of inexplicable, sudden changes in the foundations of these major fields of science in 1946.
The nuclear geochemist, Paul Kazuo Kuroda aka Kazuo Kuroda (1917-2001), was more circumspect in leaving hints in the description of his life as a graduate student and then as a faculty member at the Imperial University of Tokyo, studying radium, radon and other trace elements in hot springs and later extracting uranium from Manchurian euxenite ore for Japan during WWII [2].
Kuroda became my research mentor in 1960 and assigned this research project: "The Origin of the Solar System and Its Elements." This paper includes many of the research findings summarized in my biography, in progress [3]. After Kazuo Kuroda's death, BBC News reported [4] his widow returned secret atomic bomb plans missing from Japan for fifty-seven years (2002 - 1945 = 57 years).
The BBC News Report [4] of chaos in the handling of nuclear secrets in August
1945 and the earlier warning about possible annihilation of planet Earth by
uncontrollable release of nuclear energy - in the last paragraph of Aston's 1922
Nobel Prize Lecture [5] - suggest that fear of nuclear annihilation may have
influenced the decision to obscure the force of neutron repulsion in cores of heavy
atoms and stars after WWII.
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/10640850/Solar_Energy2.pdf
Which for some unfathomable reason, the Editors of Natur Climate Change have declined to review for publication.
ARE JOE & MARK READY FOR PRIME TIME OR SOUTH PARK?
K-Street commissar Marc Morano's creepy lip service to the oil patch party line has sent another communitarian over the authoritarian brink.
Watch PC PBS climate communicator Joe Nye the Science Guy embrace his inner Trump, and voice the illiberal idea of winding down the climate wars the old fashioned way: by rounding up the usual suspects.
This all sounds too, too familiar:
May 13, 2008
NULLIUS IN VERBA : Lord Rees Replies
.
Nullius In Verba By RUSSELL SEITZ
Nullius In Verba By RUSSELL SEITZ
The Royal Society's view of the conflict between authority and evidence is made clear by its motto. Nullius in Verba is Latin shorthand for what Harry Truman meant when he said "I'm from Missouri. Show me." It's a notion the full quote from Horace -- Nullius addictus judicare in verba magestri -- expands into the gold standard of objectivity: "Not compelled to swear to any master's words."
In political terms that translates into don't let policy proceed from mere perceptions of authority. Abroad, the Royal Society shares the outrage of American scientists at pious politicians seeking to constrain stem cell research funding. But at home the Royal Society seems bent on stopping research at odds with the environmental agenda of the Labor Party
.
Old Labour's hoariest political stratagem, class warfare, collapsed along with communism a generation ago. In that implosion's aftermath, the environment has become New Labour's communitarian fall-back excuse for justifying societal intervention. The Royal Society has been a Whig institution since Darwin's day, encompassing a dynasty of left-wing science popularizers going back to J.B.S. Haldane and Bertrand Russell. Now it is trying to establish itself as a virtual Leviathan in the world of Green politics by extending the political correctness of Tony Blair's nanny state into the scientific realm. Its latest outburst is an Orwellian call to defund scientific inquiry instead of defending it.
The Royal Society's senior manager for policy communication, Robert Ward, has tried to browbeat Exxon Mobil into blacklisting 39 groups whose inconvenient dissent casts doubt on the policy agenda shared by the Society and the United Nations International Panel on Climate Change. A letter from Mr. Ward to Exxon leaked to the Guardian reveals that he wants those he deems to have "misrepresented the science of climate change" put on a Do Not Fund List because "[t]he next IPCC report gives people the final push that they need to take action and we can't have people trying to undermine it."
In political terms that translates into don't let policy proceed from mere perceptions of authority. Abroad, the Royal Society shares the outrage of American scientists at pious politicians seeking to constrain stem cell research funding. But at home the Royal Society seems bent on stopping research at odds with the environmental agenda of the Labor Party
.
Old Labour's hoariest political stratagem, class warfare, collapsed along with communism a generation ago. In that implosion's aftermath, the environment has become New Labour's communitarian fall-back excuse for justifying societal intervention. The Royal Society has been a Whig institution since Darwin's day, encompassing a dynasty of left-wing science popularizers going back to J.B.S. Haldane and Bertrand Russell. Now it is trying to establish itself as a virtual Leviathan in the world of Green politics by extending the political correctness of Tony Blair's nanny state into the scientific realm. Its latest outburst is an Orwellian call to defund scientific inquiry instead of defending it.
The Royal Society's senior manager for policy communication, Robert Ward, has tried to browbeat Exxon Mobil into blacklisting 39 groups whose inconvenient dissent casts doubt on the policy agenda shared by the Society and the United Nations International Panel on Climate Change. A letter from Mr. Ward to Exxon leaked to the Guardian reveals that he wants those he deems to have "misrepresented the science of climate change" put on a Do Not Fund List because "[t]he next IPCC report gives people the final push that they need to take action and we can't have people trying to undermine it."
In other words, stop gainsaying the science that Green foundations are paying good money to advertise. The source of political contention is less the science in the IPCC's indigestibly erudite 4,000-page reports than their translation into vivid Green rhetoric by the bureaucratic masters of the U.N. Environmental Program (UNEP). Those floridly political "executive summaries" have driven everything from the Kyoto Treaty to EU regulation of refrigerators.
Those who aspire to New Labour's science establishment may feel compelled to swear by such words, lest they end up blackballed from the other London club frequented by the Society's president, the House of Lords. Lord May, the president of the Royal Society, owes his peerage to faithful service as Tony Blair's chief science adviser, and echoing Foreign (and past Environment) Minister Margaret Beckett's repetition of whatever Green publicists air. The laboratory cash flow of the honorable Eco-Lord's pals will also swell if the Royal Society can empower UNEP by silencing disloyal whispers that no one knows how to forecast climate 344 years hence.
And silence them it will -- protracted scientific controversy about global systems models is tedious, and the authoritarian backroom boys at the Royal Society understandably intend to end it. Mr. Blair's "Yes, Minister" nanny state scorns free speech. True, some of the contrarian organizations on the blacklist are no great loss to science because they are run by registered lobbyists. But their reluctance to acknowledge climate change is no excuse for freezing out freedom of scientific inquiry.
The Royal Society must choose between its motto and using other people's purse strings to throttle dissent -- if the motto goes, it must abdicate its divine right to pontificate as well. If it persists in toying with censorship, it should be privatized for seeking to subjugate the Republic of Science to the words of its political masters.
If it wants to reinvent itself as a Green PR firm, fine -- let the private foundations pushing the UNEP foot the bill. Perhaps they can underwrite the hostile takeover of scientific independence by selling Royal Society Fellowships, just as New Labour does peerages, for payments in cash or political kind. But what about the clubhouse?
Lord May & Co.'s palatial premises overlooking St. James's Park should of course revert to the crown, whence the late Society's grace and favor so long flowed. Her Majesty's government may want to turn it into condos, like the former Royal Mint, as advertising firms already in the business of selling science would pay handsomely for such a prestigious address, and diehards bent on imposing technical literacy on Parliament (or Congress) can still be locked safely away in its commodious wine cellar. Few in government will notice their absence, because fashionable as talk of politicized science may be, it cannot fairly be said to exist until both sides have some inkling of what it is they are trying to politicize.
No one compelled Thomas Jefferson to swear "eternal hostility to every form of tyranny over the mind of man." If the recent history of science has anything to teach, it is that there is no place in a free society for a self-appointed Central Committee of Scientific Truth. Until the Royal Society comes to grips with the Enlightenment, its baroque motto deserves a rest.
ROYAL SOCIETY PRESIDENT LORD REES REPLIES
Those who aspire to New Labour's science establishment may feel compelled to swear by such words, lest they end up blackballed from the other London club frequented by the Society's president, the House of Lords. Lord May, the president of the Royal Society, owes his peerage to faithful service as Tony Blair's chief science adviser, and echoing Foreign (and past Environment) Minister Margaret Beckett's repetition of whatever Green publicists air. The laboratory cash flow of the honorable Eco-Lord's pals will also swell if the Royal Society can empower UNEP by silencing disloyal whispers that no one knows how to forecast climate 344 years hence.
And silence them it will -- protracted scientific controversy about global systems models is tedious, and the authoritarian backroom boys at the Royal Society understandably intend to end it. Mr. Blair's "Yes, Minister" nanny state scorns free speech. True, some of the contrarian organizations on the blacklist are no great loss to science because they are run by registered lobbyists. But their reluctance to acknowledge climate change is no excuse for freezing out freedom of scientific inquiry.
True, some of the contrarian organizations on the blacklist are no great loss to science because they are run by registered lobbyists. But their reluctance to acknowledge climate change is no excuse for freezing out freedom of scientific inquiry.
The Royal Society must choose between its motto and using other people's purse strings to throttle dissent -- if the motto goes, it must abdicate its divine right to pontificate as well. If it persists in toying with censorship, it should be privatized for seeking to subjugate the Republic of Science to the words of its political masters.
If it wants to reinvent itself as a Green PR firm, fine -- let the private foundations pushing the UNEP foot the bill. Perhaps they can underwrite the hostile takeover of scientific independence by selling Royal Society Fellowships, just as New Labour does peerages, for payments in cash or political kind. But what about the clubhouse?
Lord May & Co.'s palatial premises overlooking St. James's Park should of course revert to the crown, whence the late Society's grace and favor so long flowed. Her Majesty's government may want to turn it into condos, like the former Royal Mint, as advertising firms already in the business of selling science would pay handsomely for such a prestigious address, and diehards bent on imposing technical literacy on Parliament (or Congress) can still be locked safely away in its commodious wine cellar. Few in government will notice their absence, because fashionable as talk of politicized science may be, it cannot fairly be said to exist until both sides have some inkling of what it is they are trying to politicize.
No one compelled Thomas Jefferson to swear "eternal hostility to every form of tyranny over the mind of man." If the recent history of science has anything to teach, it is that there is no place in a free society for a self-appointed Central Committee of Scientific Truth. Until the Royal Society comes to grips with the Enlightenment, its baroque motto deserves a rest.
Russell Seitz's florid depiction of the Royal Society "Nullius in Verba," is entertaining but misleading in the extreme. It is ironic that he labors to portray us as an organization with scant regard for the evidence when he fails even to identify me as the current president. (Lord May was my predecessor.)
Contrary to his accusation, the Society has never sought to prevent the funding of scientific inquiry on climate change or any other area. In fact, the Society champions and promotes academic freedom. It funds some of the United Kingdom's best scientists on the basis of their excellence and does not place any conditions on their research that would in any way compromise their independence.
The Royal Society has never asked Exxon to stop funding any organizations. At a meeting, instigated by Exxon, the Society pointed out that the company was funding a number of groups that have been misinforming the public about the scientific evidence on climate change. The company freely made a pledge to stop this funding, and the letter Mr. Seitz cites in his article followed up that assurance.
The Royal Society and 10 of the world's scientific academies, including the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, have spoken out on climate change in order to clarify where the overwhelming weight of scientific evidence lies. Let us be clear: This points to the need for urgent international action to cut emissions of greenhouse gases.
Ensuring that science is properly represented is wholly in keeping with the Society's motto, "Nullius in Verba." This translates as "on the words of no one," an expression of commitment to empirical evidence as the basis of knowledge about the natural world. The debate about how to tackle climate change must be based on the science rather than misinformation propagated by lobby groups.
Martin Rees
President of the Royal Society
President of the Royal Society
London
Russell Seitz comments:
I did not wish to make Rees a party to a controversy initiated by his predecessor , but regret I failed to catch the removal of 'past ' from in front of 'president ' at one point as the essay was edited down to Op-ed length by the WSJ. Lord May has continued to speak for himself, but I ought indeed to have followed the RS election cycle more diligently.
However, I note Rees fails to identify himself as having presided over the departure of past Manager For Policy Communications Ward from the Royal Society's employ , to join, of all things , a (floridly ) 'Green lobby group.'
Monday, April 11, 2016
IT'S NOT DEAD-- IT'S JUST HIBERNATING
AS ORIGINALLY MODELED , 'NUCLEAR WINTER' LIVED UP TO ITS NAME: IT HYPOTHESIZED MONTHS OF SUBZERO COLD AND DARKNESS. PAUL EHRLICH WENT SO FAR AS TO TELL A RADIO AUDIENCE TO EXPECT "REPORTS OF PEOPLE DYING OF THIRST ON THE EQUATOR BECAUSE ALL THE WATER IS FROZEN."
BUT WHILE THIS GRIM PROPHECY'S AUTHORS NOW INSIST THEIR
"1980s predictions of nuclear winter effects were, if anything, underestimates."
-- Physics Today December 2008 THEY NOTE ELSEWHERE
"We do not conduct detailed new studies of the smoke and dust emissions from nuclear attacks here. Rather, we chose emissions based on previous studies so as to make our results comparable to them." - Journal of Geophysical Research July 2007
SO HOW DO THE OLD AND NEW MODELS
ACTUALLY LOOK WHEN COMPARED ?
"Nuclear Winter" was less an hypothesis than a media campaign-- it debuted not in Science , as many assume but Parade magazine, where peer review posed no problem, as Carl Sagan was its Science Editor.
The surviving TTAPS autors, Turco, Toon and Ackerman seem to be in denial- progress in climate science has not sustained the vision of subzero cold and global night they advertised in the 1980's. To keep their apocalyptic factoid alive, they have rejected the empirical studies that gutted the guesstimates on which the 1983 model relied, and resorted to even more unrealistic assumptions, like smoke particles that hang in the air for a decade. Never mind the residence time of micrometeorite debris, just move along.
The surviving TTAPS autors, Turco, Toon and Ackerman seem to be in denial- progress in climate science has not sustained the vision of subzero cold and global night they advertised in the 1980's. To keep their apocalyptic factoid alive, they have rejected the empirical studies that gutted the guesstimates on which the 1983 model relied, and resorted to even more unrealistic assumptions, like smoke particles that hang in the air for a decade. Never mind the residence time of micrometeorite debris, just move along.
The effort to revive the expression by defining it down to fit the data recalls another authority who met with a crack-up:
“When I use a word,’ Humpty Dumpty said in rather a scornful tone, ‘it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.’
’The question is,’ said Alice, ‘whether you can make words mean so many different things.’
’The question is,’ said Humpty Dumpty, ‘which is to be master — that’s all.”
In 1983, the words "nuclear winter" were supposed to mean a global deep freeze dark enough to scare a Siberian Commisar into signing a peace treaty- the severity of winter weather, as reflected in heating bills, is reckoned in terms of time and temperature , and at 22,000 degree-days the TTAPS worst case 'winter' was harsher than any place on Earth.
While winter in Washington DC adds up to 5,000 degree-days The new 'winters' from the old modelers weigh in at under 1,000, and span roughly the range from Savannah to Havana.
But one thing hasn't changed since the days of the Cold War: even if the end of the world isn't what it used to be , strategic policy remains too important to be predicated on mythology.
Thursday, April 7, 2016
NUCLEAR WINTER: THE WAGES OF HYPE
The ' Nuclear Winter ' Meltdown
THIS IS NOT A CLIMATE MODEL: COVER ART FROM THE CREATIVE DEPARTMENT OF PORTER NOVELLI ARTIST JON LOMBORG ALSO DESIGNED THE VOYAGER PROBE ICON |
While Cold War efforts to scare the world into disarmament devolveded into a scientific fiasco- the melt down of estimated 'nuclear winter' impacts in the face of further research recalls the transformation of the 'Energy Crisis' into the 'Oil Glut', and the implosion of "The Population Bomb." 'nuclear winter' still deserves credit for surfacing the concept of radiative climate forcing, albeit by exaggerating it by several orders of magnitude or more.
Scientists at large may disdain media hype, but in consciousness raising, nothing succeeds like excess. Nuclear winter became as famous as Carl Sagan could make it on The Johnny Carson Show, a P-R tour de force Madison Avenue and K-Street have not forgotten, witness energy industry flacks adopting the peace movement's worst polemic excesses as Best Practices in denying positive radiative forcing by CO2.
Roan asked for primary sources, so here are direct quotes, graphs, & articles from Foreign Affairs, The New Republic, The National Interest and Nature that raise some interesting questions:
What drove the eminently liberal President of The Council for a Livable World to call the "nuclear winter " PR campaign:
'The worst example of the misrepresentation of science
to the public in my memory.' ?
Why did the present Director of the Harvard Center for Climate and Security characterize the TTAPS 'nuclear winter ' manuscript as:
"a political document rather than a scientific document "
What led Science senior writer Eliot Marshall to call the theory one of the "great science fictions of the Reagan era" ?
Or compelled Al Gore to tell a "Is Nuclear Winter Real and Relevant?" symposium that the apocalyptic hypothesis was
"too uncertain to justify changing strategic doctrine" ?
And what did TTAPS authors -Turco, Toon, Ackerman, Pollack and Sagan, do that led Nobel laureate, Richard Feynman to conclude:
"You know, I really don't think these guys
know what they're talking about."
The ruckus began in 1983 in Foreign Affairs, when Carl Sagan wrote :
"Apocalyptic predictions require, to be taken seriously, higher standards of evidence than do assertions on other matters where the stakes are not as great."
This presented a problem, for the extraordinary evidence for his extraordinary (and very scary) claims wasn't forthcoming, and the process that gave rise to them was far from transparent. In consequence, as Nature noted in editorials at the height of the Cold War, and I repeated there in 2011:
Nuclear winter was and is debatable
Russell Seitz
- Alan Robock's contention that there has been no real scientific debate about the 'nuclear winter' concept is itself debatable (Nature 473, 275–276; 2011).
This potential climate disaster, popularized in Science in 1983, rested on the output of a one-dimensional model that was later shown to overestimate the smoke a nuclear holocaust might engender. More refined estimates, combined with advanced three-dimensional models (see http://go.nature.com/kss8te), have dramatically reduced the extent and severity of the projected cooling.
Despite this, Carl Sagan, who co-authored the 1983 Science paper, went so far as to posit “the extinction of Homo sapiens” (C. Sagan Foreign Affairs 63, 75–77; 1984). Some regarded this apocalyptic prediction as an exercise in mythology. George Rathjens of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology protested: “Nuclear winter is the worst example of the misrepresentation of science to the public in my memory,” (see http://go.nature.com/yujz84) and climatologist Kerry Emanuel observed that the subject had “become notorious for its lack of scientific integrity” (Nature 319, 259; 1986).
Robock's single-digit fall in temperature is at odds with the subzero (about −25 °C) continental cooling originally projected for a wide spectrum of nuclear wars. Whereas Sagan predicted darkness at noon from a US–Soviet nuclear conflict, Robock projects global sunlight that is several orders of magnitude brighter for a Pakistan–India conflict — literally the difference between night and day. Since 1983, the projected worst-case cooling has fallen from a Siberian deep freeze spanning 11,000 degree-days Celsius (a measure of the severity of winters) to numbers so unseasonably small as to call the very term 'nuclear winter' into question.
-
Russell Seitz, Harvard University Nature 475, 37 Doi:10.1038/475037b
AND NOW A WORD FROM ALAN ROBOCK & TTAPS AUTHORS RICHARD TURCO & OWEN TOON :
"We do not conduct detailed new studies of the smoke and dust emissions from nuclear attacks here. Rather, we chose emissions based on previous studies so as to make our results comparable to them." - Journal of Geophysical Research JULY 2007
"1980s predictions of nuclear winter effects were, if anything, underestimates."
-- Physics Today December 2008
OK , THEN, LET US COMPARE BOTH ON ONE GRAPH, LIKE THIS:
The Catch-22 is that the authors are in denial- they are rejecting a decade's worth of empirical studies that gutted the guesstimates that went into their original model. They have gone back to where they started in 1983, instead of where the science ended up a decade later.
Then as now, what happens depends on what the modelers put into the model: Not enough soot to blacken the sky? Just inflate its lifetime to make up the difference:
Why ? Because Precautionary Principle. And Special Sauce.It's not going down well though- too many scientists noticed this gambit when they tried it the first time around :
Climate Change: Skeptics vs. Deniers
STEPHEN H. SCHNEIDER” Science Insider , issue 33(3):17, May/June 2009,
All good scientists are skeptical:
I changed my mind from cooling to warming in 1974 when the preponderance of evidence shifted—and is now well established.
I changed my views on nuclear winter making it “nuclear autumn” in 1984, incurring the wrath of the peace movement—again because the preponderance of evidence shifted with study. That is a skeptic—what all scientists should be.
But real skeptics still accept a preponderance of carefully examined evidence even when some elements of a complex systems problem remain unresolved—and do not pretend that when there are loose ends some well-established preponderances don’t exist—that is beyond skepticism to denial—or political convenience often.
So a skeptic questions everything but accepts what the preponderance of evidence is, and a denier falsely claims that until all aspects are resolved we know nothing and should do nothing—often motivated by the latter. If you deny a clear preponderance of evidence, you have crossed the line from legitimate skeptic to ideological denier.
The New Republic 1987
TRB from Washington
THE LITTLE CHILL
TRB is on vacation. This column was written
by Eliot Marshall a writer for Science
magazine.
Three years ago Carl Sagan and a few
other scientists proposed a new theory
of Armageddon. They called it "nuclear
winter," and their message was chilling.
The end of the world, they said, would
come not by fire during a nuclear attack
but by ice, afterward. After a nuclear
war, the Earth would become encircled
with smoke, dark, and cold.
No one could expect to survive the frost, not
The innocent New Zealanders or the remotest
tribes of Africa. Even a small atomic war
could end human life, Sagan concluded
in the Winter 1983 issue of Foreign Affairs
that all nuclear weapons should be eliminated,
or at least 99 percent of them.
This insight did not come from a rereading of
the Book of Revelation, It rested on modern
physics and a very sophisticated computer
program. It had the glint of hard science.
Sagan, who is an expert on the solar system
and an adviser to NASA on the Voyager
space probe, may be America's most famous
popularize of science. In 1983 several other
scientists, including biologist Paul Ehrlich
of Stanford, joined Sagan to endorse the
view that nuclear weapons were a threat
to the human species—nquite apart from
the obvious threat to civilized life north
of the equator. They launched a media
blitz that included heavy technical articles,
political essays, and TV interviews.
It still reverberates through literature.
The message was always the same:
scientific analysis "proves" that nuclear
weapons are useless. To employ them is
to commit global suicide. Even owning
them is dangerous because it increases
the risk of human extinction. The best
thing to do is to get rid of them. This
message came nine months after Reagan's
"Star Wars" speech, matching his
technician's dream with a technician's
nightmare of equal force.
The nuclear winter theorists wanted
publicity back then, and they got it.
But now the situation has changed.
The death-by-ice theory seems moribund,
riddled with problems, and of
diminishing relevance to strategic policy.
The same can be said of Reagan's
idea of using space weapons to protect
cities.
The main technical challenge to nuclear
winter comes from Stephen Schneider
and Starley Thompson, researchers at
the National Center for Atmospheric Re-
search in Boulder, Colorado. They agree
with Sagan that the number of nuclear
weapons should be reduced, but they
say the integrity of atmospheric science
should not be sacrificed to make that
point. Schneider claims that it has been
clear for perhaps two years that Sagan's
original description of nuclear winter is
not the most accurate. But coaxing has
not brought any acknowledgment that
this is so. Sagan said recently that he
found "nothing new" in a state-of-theart
computer analysis by Schneider and
Thompson to change his view of
Armageddon.
Schneider and Thompson laid out
their doubts in a Foreign Affairs article last
summer, reporting that the chance of
human extinction after a nuclear war is
"vanishingly low," They find no risk of
a new ice age. Some open, dry areas in
the war latitudes might undergo temporary
"quick freezes," But, on average,
the temperature drop in the Northern
Hemisphere would not be worse than 12
degrees during the first week or so after
an attack.
At a private gathering of experts at the
National Academy of Sciences in January,
it became clear that this new mild
version of "nuclear autumn" is credible
and may even overstate the temperature
drop. This does not mean the climatic
impacts of war would be mild, Schneider
and Thompson say that rice and soybeans
are sensitive to small temperature
changes and that global rainfall patterns
might be disrupted. Millions (billions?)
might starve. But there would be no ice
in the tropics; that is certain. Schneider
says: "Carl's idea was brilliant. He proposed
an invasion from Mars," It just
didn't hold up under scrutiny.
The more apocalyptic version of nuclear
winter has become a part of the
anti-weapons dogma of the 1980s, As a
result, some people may be reluctant to
let it go. Others will delight in its agonies.
For example, Russell Seitz, a conservative
critic writing in the National Interest,
sees something like collusion in the
nuclear freezers' promotion of this theory
and some scientists' attempts to keep
it alive. He claims it was created by the
"psychological strategists of the peace
movement" in 1982 to give the torpid
populace a jolt. Seitz also blames it for
promoting a panic among America's allies
in the South Pacific, leading to attempts
in Australia and New Zealand to
banish U.S, nuclear ships from their
ports, Sagan and co-authors label the
Seitz article "ranting,"
Although Schneider's milder scenario
has more credibility today, the technical
argument has a long way to run.
This is because the Pentagon has been
cajoled into taking nuclear winter seriously.
The Defense and Energy Departments
have increased research on
nuclear winter from around $300,000 a
few years ago to around $5.5 million
now. It is embedded in the budget. The
amount is nothing like the $5 billion
spent on the other millennial fancy
of the 1980s, "Star Wars," and not
enough—the vested researchers say—to
provide definitive answers to the questions
Sagan has raised.
But even without definitive answers,
it may be time to say goodbye to nuclear
winter as a policy issue. If Schneider and
Thompson are right, and atmospheric
scientists seem to think they are, the climatic
impact is just one of a dozen "secondary
effects" of nuclear war that
would make life hardly worth living.
The main policy debate will continue to
focus on the "primary" effect: the use of
weapons. In this sense, nuclear winter
was a diversion, providing little insight
on how to cooperate on arms reductions,
an area rife with distrust.
The freeze movement may have gained
a tactical victory through the promotion
of nuclear winter. It helped get attention.
But the advantage appears to have been
short-lived. Now, as the computer termites
gnaw at the data, the structure
creaks and totters. Soon it may be gone.
Perhaps if we are lucky, 1987 will bring
the final debunking of two great science
fictions of the Reagan era: nuclear winter
and Star Wars.
Here's my 1984 Foreign Affairs critique, and the WSJ's op-ed version of the long 1986 National Interest essay ' In From The Cold : 'nuclear winter ' melts down' , from which this figure is taken:
Russell Seitz, Harvard University Nature 475, 37 Doi:10.1038/475037b
AND NOW A WORD FROM ALAN ROBOCK & TTAPS AUTHORS RICHARD TURCO & OWEN TOON :
"We do not conduct detailed new studies of the smoke and dust emissions from nuclear attacks here. Rather, we chose emissions based on previous studies so as to make our results comparable to them." - Journal of Geophysical Research JULY 2007
"1980s predictions of nuclear winter effects were, if anything, underestimates."
-- Physics Today December 2008
The Catch-22 is that the authors are in denial- they are rejecting a decade's worth of empirical studies that gutted the guesstimates that went into their original model. They have gone back to where they started in 1983, instead of where the science ended up a decade later.
Then as now, what happens depends on what the modelers put into the model: Not enough soot to blacken the sky? Just inflate its lifetime to make up the difference:
Why ? Because Precautionary Principle. And Special Sauce.It's not going down well though- too many scientists noticed this gambit when they tried it the first time around :
STEPHEN H. SCHNEIDER” Science Insider , issue 33(3):17, May/June 2009,
All good scientists are skeptical:
I changed my mind from cooling to warming in 1974 when the preponderance of evidence shifted—and is now well established.
I changed my views on nuclear winter making it “nuclear autumn” in 1984, incurring the wrath of the peace movement—again because the preponderance of evidence shifted with study. That is a skeptic—what all scientists should be.
But real skeptics still accept a preponderance of carefully examined evidence even when some elements of a complex systems problem remain unresolved—and do not pretend that when there are loose ends some well-established preponderances don’t exist—that is beyond skepticism to denial—or political convenience often.
So a skeptic questions everything but accepts what the preponderance of evidence is, and a denier falsely claims that until all aspects are resolved we know nothing and should do nothing—often motivated by the latter. If you deny a clear preponderance of evidence, you have crossed the line from legitimate skeptic to ideological denier.
The New Republic 1987
TRB from Washington
THE LITTLE CHILL
TRB is on vacation. This column was written
by Eliot Marshall a writer for Science
magazine.
Three years ago Carl Sagan and a few
other scientists proposed a new theory
of Armageddon. They called it "nuclear
winter," and their message was chilling.
The end of the world, they said, would
come not by fire during a nuclear attack
but by ice, afterward. After a nuclear
war, the Earth would become encircled
with smoke, dark, and cold.
No one could expect to survive the frost, not
The innocent New Zealanders or the remotest
tribes of Africa. Even a small atomic war
could end human life, Sagan concluded
in the Winter 1983 issue of Foreign Affairs
that all nuclear weapons should be eliminated,
or at least 99 percent of them.
This insight did not come from a rereading of
the Book of Revelation, It rested on modern
physics and a very sophisticated computer
program. It had the glint of hard science.
Sagan, who is an expert on the solar system
and an adviser to NASA on the Voyager
space probe, may be America's most famous
popularize of science. In 1983 several other
scientists, including biologist Paul Ehrlich
of Stanford, joined Sagan to endorse the
view that nuclear weapons were a threat
to the human species—nquite apart from
the obvious threat to civilized life north
of the equator. They launched a media
blitz that included heavy technical articles,
political essays, and TV interviews.
It still reverberates through literature.
The message was always the same:
scientific analysis "proves" that nuclear
weapons are useless. To employ them is
to commit global suicide. Even owning
them is dangerous because it increases
the risk of human extinction. The best
thing to do is to get rid of them. This
message came nine months after Reagan's
"Star Wars" speech, matching his
technician's dream with a technician's
nightmare of equal force.
The nuclear winter theorists wanted
publicity back then, and they got it.
But now the situation has changed.
The death-by-ice theory seems moribund,
riddled with problems, and of
diminishing relevance to strategic policy.
The same can be said of Reagan's
idea of using space weapons to protect
cities.
The main technical challenge to nuclear
winter comes from Stephen Schneider
and Starley Thompson, researchers at
the National Center for Atmospheric Re-
search in Boulder, Colorado. They agree
with Sagan that the number of nuclear
weapons should be reduced, but they
say the integrity of atmospheric science
should not be sacrificed to make that
point. Schneider claims that it has been
clear for perhaps two years that Sagan's
original description of nuclear winter is
not the most accurate. But coaxing has
not brought any acknowledgment that
this is so. Sagan said recently that he
found "nothing new" in a state-of-theart
computer analysis by Schneider and
Thompson to change his view of
Armageddon.
Schneider and Thompson laid out
their doubts in a Foreign Affairs article last
summer, reporting that the chance of
human extinction after a nuclear war is
"vanishingly low," They find no risk of
a new ice age. Some open, dry areas in
the war latitudes might undergo temporary
"quick freezes," But, on average,
the temperature drop in the Northern
Hemisphere would not be worse than 12
degrees during the first week or so after
an attack.
At a private gathering of experts at the
National Academy of Sciences in January,
it became clear that this new mild
version of "nuclear autumn" is credible
and may even overstate the temperature
drop. This does not mean the climatic
impacts of war would be mild, Schneider
and Thompson say that rice and soybeans
are sensitive to small temperature
changes and that global rainfall patterns
might be disrupted. Millions (billions?)
might starve. But there would be no ice
in the tropics; that is certain. Schneider
says: "Carl's idea was brilliant. He proposed
an invasion from Mars," It just
didn't hold up under scrutiny.
The more apocalyptic version of nuclear
winter has become a part of the
anti-weapons dogma of the 1980s, As a
result, some people may be reluctant to
let it go. Others will delight in its agonies.
For example, Russell Seitz, a conservative
critic writing in the National Interest,
sees something like collusion in the
nuclear freezers' promotion of this theory
and some scientists' attempts to keep
it alive. He claims it was created by the
"psychological strategists of the peace
movement" in 1982 to give the torpid
populace a jolt. Seitz also blames it for
promoting a panic among America's allies
in the South Pacific, leading to attempts
in Australia and New Zealand to
banish U.S, nuclear ships from their
ports, Sagan and co-authors label the
Seitz article "ranting,"
Although Schneider's milder scenario
has more credibility today, the technical
argument has a long way to run.
This is because the Pentagon has been
cajoled into taking nuclear winter seriously.
The Defense and Energy Departments
have increased research on
nuclear winter from around $300,000 a
few years ago to around $5.5 million
now. It is embedded in the budget. The
amount is nothing like the $5 billion
spent on the other millennial fancy
of the 1980s, "Star Wars," and not
enough—the vested researchers say—to
provide definitive answers to the questions
Sagan has raised.
But even without definitive answers,
it may be time to say goodbye to nuclear
winter as a policy issue. If Schneider and
Thompson are right, and atmospheric
scientists seem to think they are, the climatic
impact is just one of a dozen "secondary
effects" of nuclear war that
would make life hardly worth living.
The main policy debate will continue to
focus on the "primary" effect: the use of
weapons. In this sense, nuclear winter
was a diversion, providing little insight
on how to cooperate on arms reductions,
an area rife with distrust.
The freeze movement may have gained
a tactical victory through the promotion
of nuclear winter. It helped get attention.
But the advantage appears to have been
short-lived. Now, as the computer termites
gnaw at the data, the structure
creaks and totters. Soon it may be gone.
Perhaps if we are lucky, 1987 will bring
the final debunking of two great science
fictions of the Reagan era: nuclear winter
and Star Wars.
Here's my 1984 Foreign Affairs critique, and the WSJ's op-ed version of the long 1986 National Interest essay ' In From The Cold : 'nuclear winter ' melts down' , from which this figure is taken:
The Melting of 'Nuclear Winter' 1986
The End Of The World isn't what it used to be.
Nuclear Winter', the theory launched [in 1984] that predicted ...a nuclear exchange as small as 100 megatons ("a pure tactical war, in Europe, say" in Carl Sagan's phrase), in addition to its lethal primary effects, would fill the sky with smoke and dust, ushering in life-extinguishing sub-zero darkness, has been laid to rest in the semantic potter's field alongside the "Energy Crisis" and the "Population Bomb." Cause of death: notorious lack of scientific integrity.
The Nuclear Winter conjecture has unraveled under scrutiny. Yet not so long ago, policy analysts took it so seriously that there is reason to examine how the powerful synergy of environmental concern and the politics disarmament drove some scientists to forge an unholy alliance with Madison Avenue. Mere software has been advertised as hard scientific fact. How did this polarization arise?
In 1982, a question arose within the inner circle of disarmament activists: Could the moral force of Jonathan Schell's eloquent call to lay down arms, "The Fate of the Earth," be transformed into a scientific imperative? Peace-movement strategists wanted something new to dramatize
nuclear war's horrors. As Ralph K. White put it in his book "The Fearful Warriors": "Horror is needed. The peace movement cannot do without it."
What they got was surreal -- a secular apocalypse.
nuclear war's horrors. As Ralph K. White put it in his book "The Fearful Warriors": "Horror is needed. The peace movement cannot do without it."
What they got was surreal -- a secular apocalypse.
A 1982 special issue of the Swedish environmental science journal Ambio considered the environmental consequences of a nuclear war. This special issue did little to evoke a mass response of the sort needed to change the course of strategic doctrine. But one article contained the
seed of what would become Nuclear Winter.
seed of what would become Nuclear Winter.
Mr. Sagan seized upon an article by Messrs. Paul Crutzen and John Birks that raised the question of a "Twilight at Noon" if the fires ignited by nuclear holocaust were to convert much of the fuel in both woodlands and cities into enough soot to enshroud the globe. In the hands of others their concerns would be transformed into an exhortation.
The chilling climatic impact of this soot can be modeled with existing software. The paper that resulted came to be known as TTAPS, after the initials of its authors beginning with Richard Turco and ending with Carl Sagan.
Audubon Society president Russell Peterson, a friend of Ambio's editor, sent the issue to Robert Scrivner of the Rockefeller Family Fund. Mr. Scrivner convened an ad hoc consortium of foundations and scientific groups with a bent for disarmament. Cornell astrophysicist and media personality Carl Sagan assembled a scientific advisory board that drew heavily from such organizations as the Union of Concerned Scientists, Physicians for Social Responsibility, the Federation of American Scientists and the Natural Resources Defense Council. Two-dozen foundations and more than 100 scientists were recruited.
A BONE-DRY BILLIARD BALL
Nuclear Winter never existed outside of a computer, except as a painting commissioned by a PR firm. Instead of an earth with continents and oceans, the TTAPS model postulated a featureless, bone-dry billiard ball. Instead of nights and days, it postulated 24-hour sunlight at one- third strength. Instead of realistic smoke emissions, a 10-mile-thick soot cloud magically materialized, creating an alien sky as black as the ink you are reading.
The model dealt with such complications as geography, winds, sunrise, sunset and patchy clouds in a stunningly elegant manner -- they were ignored. When later computer models incorporated these elements, the flat black sky of TTAPS fell apart into a pale and broken shadow that traveled less far and dissipated more quickly.
The model dealt with such complications as geography, winds, sunrise, sunset and patchy clouds in a stunningly elegant manner -- they were ignored. When later computer models incorporated these elements, the flat black sky of TTAPS fell apart into a pale and broken shadow that traveled less far and dissipated more quickly.
The TTAPS model entailed a long series of conjectures: if this much smoke goes up, if it is this dense, if it moves like this, and so on. The improbability of a string of 40 such coin tosses coming up heads approaches that of a pat royal flush. Yet it was represented as a "sophisticated one- dimensional model" -- a usage that is oxymoronic, unless applied to Twiggy.
To the limitations of the software were added those of the data. It was an unknown and very complex topic, hard data was scant, so guesstimates prevailed. Not only were these educated guesses rampant throughout the process, but it was deemed prudent, given the gravity of the subject, to lean toward the worst-case end of the spectrum for dozens of the numbers involved. Political considerations subliminally skewed the model away from natural history, while seeming to make the expression "nuclear freeze" a part of it.
"The question of peer review is essential. That is why we have delayed so long in the publication of these dire results," said Carl Sagan
in late 1983. But instead of going through the ordinary peer-review process, the TTAPS study had been conveyed by Mr. Sagan and his colleagues to a chosen few at a closed meeting in April 1983. Despite Mr. Sagan's claim of responsible delay, before this peculiar review process had even begun, an $80,000 retainer was paid to Porter-Novelli Associates, a Washington, D.C., public-relations firm. More money was spent in the 1984 fiscal year on video and advertising than on doing the science.
in late 1983. But instead of going through the ordinary peer-review process, the TTAPS study had been conveyed by Mr. Sagan and his colleagues to a chosen few at a closed meeting in April 1983. Despite Mr. Sagan's claim of responsible delay, before this peculiar review process had even begun, an $80,000 retainer was paid to Porter-Novelli Associates, a Washington, D.C., public-relations firm. More money was spent in the 1984 fiscal year on video and advertising than on doing the science.
The meeting did not go smoothly; most participants I interviewed did not describe the reception accorded the Nuclear Winter theory as cordial or consensual. The proceedings were tape recorded, but Mr. Sagan has
repeatedly refused to release the meeting's transcript. (The organizers have said it was closed to the press to avoid sensationalism and premature disclosure.) According to Dr. Kosta Tsipis of MIT, even a Soviet scientist
at the meeting said, "You guys are fools. You can't use mathematical models like these to model perturbed states of the atmosphere. You're playing with toys."
repeatedly refused to release the meeting's transcript. (The organizers have said it was closed to the press to avoid sensationalism and premature disclosure.) According to Dr. Kosta Tsipis of MIT, even a Soviet scientist
at the meeting said, "You guys are fools. You can't use mathematical models like these to model perturbed states of the atmosphere. You're playing with toys."
Having premiered on Oct. 30, 1983,( the anniversary of Orson Welles War of The Worlds Broadcast) as an article by Mr. Sagan in the Sunday supplement Parade, the TTAPS results finally appeared in Science magazine (Dec. 23, 1983). This is the very apex of scholarly publication,customarily reserved for a review article expounding a mature addition to
an existing scientific disipline -- one that has withstood the testing of its data and hypotheses by reproducible experiments recorded in the peer-reviewed literature. Yet what became of the many complex and uncertain variables necessary to operate the Nuclear Winter model? They were not set forth in the text -- 136 pages of data were instead reduced to a reference that said, simply, "In preparation." The critical details were missing. They have languished in unpublished obscurity ever since.
an existing scientific disipline -- one that has withstood the testing of its data and hypotheses by reproducible experiments recorded in the peer-reviewed literature. Yet what became of the many complex and uncertain variables necessary to operate the Nuclear Winter model? They were not set forth in the text -- 136 pages of data were instead reduced to a reference that said, simply, "In preparation." The critical details were missing. They have languished in unpublished obscurity ever since.
The readers of Science were still bewildered when, just one week later, another article by Mr. Sagan -- "Nuclear War and Climatic Catastrophe" -- appeared in Foreign Affairs. Mr. Sagan argued that, because of the TTAPS results, "What is urgently required is a coherent, mutually agreed upon, long-term policy for dramatic reductions in nuclear armaments..."
In hastening to maximize the impact, Mr. Sagan made mistakes. While he cited the following passage as coming from a companion piece in Science that he had co-authored, it did not actually appear in the published version of that article: "In almost any realistic case involving nuclear exchanges between the superpowers, global environmental changes sufficient to cause an extinction event equal to or more severe than that of the close of the Cretaceous when the dinosaurs and many other species died out are likely. (Emphasis added)." The ominous rhetoric italicized in this passage puts even the 100 megaton scenario of TTAPS on a par with the 100 million megaton blast of an asteroid striking the Earth. This astronomical mega-hype failed to pass peer review and never appeared in Science. Yet, having appeared in Foreign Affairs, it has been repeatedly cited in the literature of strategic doctrine as evidence.
Rather than "higher standards of evidence," Mr. Sagan merely provided testimonials. He had sent return-mail questionnaires to the nearly 100 participants at the April meeting, and edited the replies down to his favorite two-dozen quotations. What became of the hard copy of the less enthusiastic reports remains a mystery, but it is evident from subsequent comments by their authors that TTAPS received less than the unanimous endorsement of "a large number of scientists." Prof. Victor Weisskopf of MIT, sized up the matter in early 1984: "Ah! Nuclear Winter! The science is terrible, but, perhaps the psychology is good."
Many scientists were reluctant to speak out, perhaps for fear of being denounced as reactionaries or closet Strangeloves. For example, physicist Freeman Dyson of the Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton was privately critical in early 1984. As he put it,"It's (TTAPS) an absolutely atrocious piece of science, but I quite despair of setting the public record straight....Who wants to be accused of being in favor of nuclear war?"
Most of the intellectual tools necessary to demolish TTAPS's bleak vision were already around then, but not the will to use them. From respected scientists one heard this:
"You know, I really don't think these guys know what they're talking about."
(Nobel laureate physicist Richard Feynman);
"They stacked the deck" (Prof. Michael McElroy, Harvard);
and, after a journalist's caution against four-letter words,
"Humbug is six " (Prof. Jonathan Katz, George Washington University.)
"You know, I really don't think these guys know what they're talking about."
(Nobel laureate physicist Richard Feynman);
"They stacked the deck" (Prof. Michael McElroy, Harvard);
and, after a journalist's caution against four-letter words,
"Humbug is six " (Prof. Jonathan Katz, George Washington University.)
In 1985, a series of unheralded and completely unpublicized studies started to appear in learned journals -- studies that, piece by piece, started to fill in the blanks in the climate-modeling process that had previously ben patched over with "educated" guesses.
The result was straightforward: As the science progressed and more authentic sophistication was achieved in newer and more elegant models, the postulated effects headed downhill. By 1986, these worst-case effects had melted down from a year of arctic darkness to warmer temperatures than the cool months in Palm Beach! A new paradigm of broken clouds and cool spots had emerged. The once global hard frost had retreated back to the northern tundra. Mr. Sagan's elaborate conjecture had fallen prey to Murphy's lesser known Second Law: If everything must go wrong, don't bet on it.
By June 1986 it was over: In a Summer 1986 Foreign Affairs article enttled 'Nuclear Winter' Reconsidered, National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) scientists Starley Thompson and Stephen Schneider declared, "...on scientific grounds the global apocalyptic conclusions of the initial nuclear winter hypothesis can now be relegated to a vanishingly low level of probability."
Yet the activist wing of the international scientific estabishment had already announced the results of the first generations of interdisciplinary ecological and climatological studies based on Nuclear Winter. Journalists paid more attention to the press releases than the substance of already obsolescent efforts at ecological modeling, and proceeded to inform the public that things were looking worse than ever. Bold headlines carried casualty estimates that ran into the proverbial "billions and billions."
This process culminated in the reception given the 1985 report of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS). Stressing the uncertainties that plagued the calculations then and now, it scrupulously excluded the expression "Nuclear Winter" from its 193 pages of sober text, but the report's press release was prefaced "Nuclear Winter...'Clear Possibility.'" Mr. Sagan construed the reports to constitute an endorsement of the theory.
But in February 1986, NCAR's Dr. Schneider quietly informed a gathering at the NASA-Ames Laboratory that Nuclear Winter had succumbed to scientific progress and that, "in a severe" 6,500-megaton strategic exchange, "The Day After" might witness July temperatures upwards of 50 plus degrees Fahrenheit in mid-America. The depths of Nuclear Winter could no longer easily be distinguished from the coolest days of summer.
As the truth slowly emerged, private skepticism turned often to public outrage, and not just among the "hawks." Prof. George Rathjens of MIT, chairman of the Council for a Livable World, offered this judgement: Nuclear Winter is the worst example of the misrepresentation of science to the public in my memory."
POLITICAL SCIENCE
On Jan. 23, 1986, Pofessor Kerry Emmanuel of MIT , writing in the leading British scientific journal Nature pronounced on the political erosion of the objectivity vital to scientific endeavor: "Nowhere is this more evident than in the recent iterature on 'Nuclear Winter,' research which has become notorious for its lack of scientific integrity."
But it is by no means solely within the halls of science that
responsibility lies or where redress and the prevention of a recurrence must be sought. Policy analysts have shown themselves to be the lawful prey of software salesmen. They seem to be chronically incapable of
distinguishing where science leaves off and the polemical abuse of global- systems modeling begins. The results of this confusion can be serious indeed. Doesn't anybody remember the last example of the "Garbage In,
Garbage Out" phenomenon -- the "Energy Crisis"? That crisis also began as a curve plotted by a computer. But it ended as "The Oil Glut." Factoids, scientific or economic, have a strange life of their own; woe to the polity that ignores the interaction of science, myth and the popular imagination
in the age of the electronic media.
responsibility lies or where redress and the prevention of a recurrence must be sought. Policy analysts have shown themselves to be the lawful prey of software salesmen. They seem to be chronically incapable of
distinguishing where science leaves off and the polemical abuse of global- systems modeling begins. The results of this confusion can be serious indeed. Doesn't anybody remember the last example of the "Garbage In,
Garbage Out" phenomenon -- the "Energy Crisis"? That crisis also began as a curve plotted by a computer. But it ended as "The Oil Glut." Factoids, scientific or economic, have a strange life of their own; woe to the polity that ignores the interaction of science, myth and the popular imagination
in the age of the electronic media.
To historians of science, the Nuclear Winter episode may seem a bizarre comedy of manners; having known sin at Hiroshima, physics was bound to run into advertising sooner or later. But what about the politics of this issue? Does all this matter? Mr. Sagan evidently thinks it does.
His homiletic overkill has been relentless. An animated version of his obsolete apocalypse has been added to his updated documentary Cosmos -- A Special Edition. This fall, prime-time audiences will watch in horror as the airbrushed edge of nuclear darknes overspreads planet Earth. Marshall McLuhan was right on the mark -- with television's advent, advertising hasbecome more important than products.
What is being advertised is not science but a pernicious fantasy that strikes at the very foundation of crisis management, one that attempts to the transform NATO's doctrine of flexible response into a dangerous vision. For despite its scientific demise, the specter of Nuclear Winter
is haunting Europe, Soviet propagandists have seized upon Nuclear Winter in their efforts to debilitate the political will of the Alliance. What more destabilizing fantasy than the equation of theater deterrence with a global Gotterdammerung could they dream of? What could be more dangerous than to invite the Soviets that the Alliance is self-deterred -- and thus at the mercy of those who possess so ominous an advantage in conventional forces?
is haunting Europe, Soviet propagandists have seized upon Nuclear Winter in their efforts to debilitate the political will of the Alliance. What more destabilizing fantasy than the equation of theater deterrence with a global Gotterdammerung could they dream of? What could be more dangerous than to invite the Soviets that the Alliance is self-deterred -- and thus at the mercy of those who possess so ominous an advantage in conventional forces?
The Roman historian Livy observed that "where there is less fear, there is generally less danger." Until those who have put activism before objectivity come to apprehend this, nuclear illusions, some spontaneous and some carefully fostered, will continue to haunt the myth-loving animal that is man.
__________________
Mr. Seitz is a Visiting Scholar in Harvard University's Center for
International Affairs. This draws on his article in the Fall 1986 issue of
The National Interest. and peer reviewed 1985 and 1986 publications in Nature
International Affairs. This draws on his article in the Fall 1986 issue of
The National Interest. and peer reviewed 1985 and 1986 publications in Nature
The New York Times
Nuclear Winter Theorists Pull Back
By MALCOLM W. BROWNE
Published: January 23, 1990
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SINCE 1983, scientists have been bitterly divided over whether a nuclear war is likely to result in a catastrophic global chilling. But the five scientists who introduced the term ''nuclear winter'' now acknowledge that they overestimated its severity, and their concession appears to have moderated the longstanding debate.
Scientists say the issues involved are as pertinent to human survival as ever, despite the new friendliness of Soviet-American relations. The strategic nuclear arsensals of both nations remain intact, they note, and could come into play if the current peaceful climate gives way to war.
The techniques developed to predict the effects of nuclear war on climate are also applicable to other climatic predictions, including the possibility that increased carbon dioxide in the air is leading to global warming, theorists say. The nuclear winter scenario is also closely related to the theory that dinosaurs became extinct when a giant meteor hit the earth and threw up a global dust cloud that caused catastrophic cooling.
The views of atmospheric scientists studying the nuclear winter theory still vary widely, although most of those interviewed said they believe a nuclear war could have some effect on climate. But most discounted the extreme view that global chilling of the atmosphere would be severe enough to be described as ''winter.'' Scientists specializing in such studies also generally reject the suggestion that a ''nuclear winter,'' in itself, could bring about the extinction of the human race. Even Dr. Richard P. Turco, the physicist who coined the phrase ''nuclear winter,'' discounts the idea.
Dr. Turco, a professor of atmospheric science at the University of California at Los Angeles, said in an interview that he had never believed that nuclear winter alone could wipe out humanity. ''That was a speculation of others, including Carl Sagan,'' he said. ''My personal opinion is that the human race wouldn't become extinct, but civilization as we know it certainly would.''
Dr. Sagan, a professor of astrophysics at Cornell University, was one of the scientists who collaborated with Dr. Turco in the article that ignited the nuclear winter dispute. The article, ''Nuclear Winter: Global Consequences of Multiple Nuclear Explosions,'' was published by the journal Science in 1983, and spawned a host of movies, plays and books predicated on the nuclear winter hypothesis.
The other authors of the article were Dr. Owen Brian Toon and Dr. James B. Pollack, both of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Ames Research Center, and Dr. Thomas P. Ackerman of Pennsylvania State University. Their paper became so famous and so frequently cited that other scientists have since referred to it by an acronym of the contributors' initials: TTAPS, pronounced ''tee-taps.''
That paper was not the first suggestion that global cooling might follow a nuclear exchange. A 1982 article by Dr. Paul J. Crutzen of the Max Planck Institute in West Germany and Dr. John W. Birks of the University of Colorado proposed the possibility of such an effect.
In a new paper published in Science, ''Climate and Smoke: An Appraisal of Nuclear Winter,'' the five TTAPS scientists review research conducted during the five years after their first joint paper. Drop in Temperatures While asserting that their general conclusions have been sustained, they say that a full-scale nuclear exchange in midsummer could reduce temperatures by an average of only 10 to 20 degrees centigrade (18 to 36 degrees Fahrenheit) in northern mid-latitudes. Compared with the reduction of 15 to 25 degrees centigrade (27 to 45 degrees Fahrenheit) predicted by their first paper, this chilling would be relatively mild, and in the view of some scientists, it deprives the phrase ''nuclear winter'' of realistic meaning.
Dr. Turco said his nuclear winter forecast had changed somewhat because he and his colleagues had been able to reduce the uncertainty inherent in some of the climatic effects involved. New experimental data and analyses from other groups also helped to refine his predictions, he said.
Dr. Stephen H. Schneider of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo., a long-standing critic of the extreme nuclear winter hypothesis, believes that a cooling of 10 to 20 degrees centigrade (18 to 36 degrees Fahrenheit) would not constitute the arrival of ''winter.''
''I would call it nuclear fall, not winter,'' Dr. Schneider said in an interview. ''But in any case, the TTAPS numbers have now more or less converged with ours, so I don't have a major problem with them anymore.''
In their latest paper, Dr. Turco and his associates say they have summarized and synthesized important experimental evidence and mathematical predictions made by other groups related to nuclear winter, thereby reducing the uncertainties inherent in their theory.
''Essentially,'' Dr. Turco said, ''what we say is that the basic physics we proposed turned out to be correct, although the magnitude of the effects has been moderated somewhat.'' Blocking of Sunlight The theory underlying nuclear winter is that if the Soviet Union and the United States were to wage an unlimited nuclear war, much of the resulting dust and smoke from fires, especially those of burning cities, would be spewed into the upper atmosphere, where it might remain for weeks or months. This would block sunlight, resulting in a sudden drop in atmospheric temperature.
The latest paper suggests some additional atmospheric effects of an all-out nuclear war, notably a severe depletion of the ozone layer in the Northern Hemisphere, which protects human beings from dangerous solar ultraviolet radiation.
But although most critics of the nuclear winter theory have expressed only muted disagreement with the latest TTAPS paper, major discrepancies remain between its estimates and those of some other leading investigators.
An important factor in such estimates, all agree, is the quantity of combustible material that would contribute to the global pall of smoke. Based on estimates by various research groups, Dr. Turco assumes the total mass of material burned, including wood, plastics, petroleum and vegetation, would be 5,075 ''teragrams'' (trillions of grams), or about 6.8 billion tons.
But another leading investigator, Dr. Richard D. Small, a thermal science expert at Pacific-Sierra Research Corporation, a Los Angeles research organization, says he disagrees strongly with this estimate, which he believes is much too high.
Dr. Small estimates that a maximum of 1,475 teragrams of material would be burned in the United States, provided all the weapons in the Soviet arsenal were successfully launched and detonated, and that all combustible material was actually ignited. Comparable figures for burned material in Europe and the Soviet Union would be proportionately less, ''because those regions simply have less combustible material in homes, businesses and industries,'' he said.
''Our estimate is based on rigorous analysis of blueprints and other records of real homes and commercial and industrial structures,'' Dr. Small said. ''We add up every possible ingredient available for burning to estimate a weighted total.''
The greatest uncertainty in the article's assumptions, he said, is in the amount of smoke that would be injected into the atmosphere, remaining aloft long enough to reduce global temperatures.
Other uncertainties include the amount of smoke that would be removed from the atmosphere by rain, and the height to which smoke would be lifted by fires ignited in a nuclear exchange. These and other factors could radically change the atmospheric effects. Biggest Uncertainty ''Perhaps the largest uncertainty is timing,'' Dr. Schneider said. A nuclear exchange in late spring or summer might have a significant effect on temperature, while a war in late fall or winter would have no appreciable effect, because sunlight is already reduced and temperatures are already low, he said. The growing season, moreover, would be over, and therefore unaffected by cooling.
Dr. George Rathjens, a professor of political science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, charged in an interview that ''all the hype about a lot of freezing following a nuclear exchange is hyperbole.'' He said his own calculations, using the latest of Dr. Small's numerical smoke estimates in a standard mathematical model, result in a temperature drop of only about 9 degrees centigrade (16 degrees Fahrenheit) after a full-scale nuclear war in the Northern Hemisphere in midsummer.
''I remain unconvinced that the TTAPS authors have a robust basis for their conclusions,'' he said, ''although in their latest paper they have made a fair number of concessions consistent with the work of others.''
Russell Seitz, whose critical analysis of the nuclear winter hypothesis attracted wide attention while he was a visiting scholar at Harvard University, is also unconvinced by the latest TTAPS paper. He said it is ''blatant semantic aggression'' to describe the available scientific data as pointing to a nuclear winter.
In reply to Dr. Rathjens and Mr. Seitz, Dr. Turco characterized them as ''nonspecialists with political axes to grind and who have no real technical background.
Dr. Turco said he and Dr. Sagan are about to publish a book, ''Nuclear Winter and an End to the Arms Race,'' in which they advocate reducing Soviet and American arsenals of nuclear warheads to a few hundred each. Link to Dinosaur Theory The scientific issues involved in the nuclear winter debate stem directly from a parallel debate concerning the reasons dinosaurs became extinct. In 1979, the late Dr. Luis Alvarez of the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory in California; his son, Dr. Walter Alvarez of the University of California at Berkeley, and their colleagues proposed a new explanation for the extinction of dinosaurs and many other forms of life 65 million years ago at the close of the Cretaceous period.
They theorized that the earth was struck by an asteroid or comet, which threw up an immense dust cloud that quickly blanketed the planet. They believe the cloud blocked sunlight, chilled the atmosphere and interfered with the photosynthetic process on which plants depend. The result, they hypothesized, was a mass extinction of the dinosaurs. That theory led directly to the nuclear winter hypothesis. The impact hypothesis has been challenged by paleontologists who believe that the extinction of dinosaurs had more complicated causes. Some paleontologists believe that if changing climate was a reason, it was probably caused by dust and gases from a continent-sized volcanic eruption in what is now India. Others believe that falling sea levels, disease and other factors caused the extinctions.
Now that the nuclear winter debate appears to center more on technical issues than personalities, participants hope it will cool. ''It's nice to see these guys acting like scientists again,'' a researcher said.
Nuclear Winter: Debated Points
The dispute over whether a nuclear war would cause a ''nuclear winter,'' fatal to human life on earth, hinges on these variables:
CONFLAGRATION
How much flammable material is available to burn? Would fires be in urban areas, with presumably more combustible material?
ATMOSPHERIC DYNAMICS
Would dust and smoke injected into the upper atmosphere remain there to reduce global temperatures, or would much of it precipitate as ''black rain?''
TIMING
Would the fires be in spring or summer, or in fall or winter, when temperatures are already low?
DARKNESS
How much light-blocking effect would the soot from the fires have?
Photos: Dr. Richard P. Turco (NYT/Marty Katz); Dr. Stephen H. Schneider (pg. C8)
Historical postscript
As the Kuwait oil fires began in 1991 , Sagan appeared on NBC Nightline and predicted that the apocalyptic firestorms and black skies would collapse the monsoonal circulation and doom Asia to starve beneath a frigid pall.It didn't happen.
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