Do you remember when global warming was small enough for people to care about the details of how climate scientists put together records of global temperature history? Seems like a long time ago…
— gavin @ 15 December 2020
Carbomontanus says:
17 Dec 2020 at 4:45 AM
Hr. Schmidt
What interests me again is that fameous bump in the curve around 1940, that seems to start 1910 and end 1975, period 65 years. Which is not Saturnus. But it has been helping a lot of surrealism all the time that I have followed the climate dispute.
As a specialist on music acoustics feedback and oscillation however, I must take that quite more serious, and it is quite common in nature, the meandering of rivers, tigers, zebras and mackrels...
To study this, I did take pictures for a while of all kinds of possible “mackerel- clouds” Altostratus undulatus, Kelvin- Helmholz oscillation, due to certain conditions and instabilities of “unlinear” kind in viscous systems.
It takes microchosmic forces, van der Waals- forces in addition to and different from “classical physics”, and thus very important to organology... That together is easily shown experimentally on the oscilloscope...
I see clearly that the smaller and shorter details in the curve are chaotic, like “random noise”. But I lack the 11 year sunspot swells in your recent presentation,...
Bumps and scratches in the waterline of the Oslo-Kiel- ferry, that even could be dated by the successive layers of paint… did follow the 11year +- sunspot- curve for years, because of varying ice in the fjords and the belts.
And this could be given a possible natural explaination, if we also assume that the solar wind and fluctuating UV has its effect on the stratosphere and jet- stream in the north atlantic monsune where I live. (=Max draught in Mars, Max rain in August.)
And that this explains your vanishing of obvious solar cycle-swells from earlier curves.
An ever more perfect dataset?
Do you remember when global warming was small enough for people to care about the details of how climate scientists put together records of global temperature history? Seems like a long time ago…
— gavin @ 15 December 2020
Carbomontanus says:
17 Dec 2020 at 4:45 AM
Hr. Schmidt
What interests me again is that fameous bump in the curve around 1940, that seems to start 1910 and end 1975, period 65 years. Which is not Saturnus. But it has been helping a lot of surrealism all the time that I have followed the climate dispute.
As a specialist on music acoustics feedback and oscillation however, I must take that quite more serious, and it is quite common in nature, the meandering of rivers, tigers, zebras and mackrels...
To study this, I did take pictures for a while of all kinds of possible “mackerel- clouds” Altostratus undulatus, Kelvin- Helmholz oscillation, due to certain conditions and instabilities of “unlinear” kind in viscous systems.
It takes microchosmic forces, van der Waals- forces in addition to and different from “classical physics”, and thus very important to organology... That together is easily shown experimentally on the oscilloscope...
I see clearly that the smaller and shorter details in the curve are chaotic, like “random noise”. But I lack the 11 year sunspot swells in your recent presentation,...
Bumps and scratches in the waterline of the Oslo-Kiel- ferry, that even could be dated by the successive layers of paint… did follow the 11year +- sunspot- curve for years, because of varying ice in the fjords and the belts.
And that this explains your vanishing of obvious solar cycle-swells from earlier curves.