Climatologists pay too little attention to the role water plays
in earth's energy system, including the way water vapor affects
air temperature. Water's potential to affect air temperature is
well established in science. As I have noted in previous
posts the ability of CO2 to affect temperature is highly
questionable.
Those who spend much time in greenhouses know that they are
often very humid places because water evaporates from plants and
from surfaces that get wet when the plants are watered.
Meteorologists typically refer to the water vapor content of the air
as relative humidity which is how close the air is to holding as
much water vapor as it can hold at its current temperature.
Unfortunately many climatologists waste so much time on the
nonexistent impact of radiation on air temperature that they don't
provide sufficient emphasis to the significant impact of water vapor
on air temperature. Those who want to blame climate changes on
humans ignore the fact that the combustion of hydrogen containing
fossil fuels increases the amount of water vapor in the air. Other
human actitivies such as watering yards, washing cars and operating
public fountains also add water to the atmosphere.
Water has some special thermal characteristics that can
significantly affect atmospheric temperatures. Water heats and cools
signicantly slower than other components of the atmosphere. Water
vapor needs to absorb over four times more heat energy than the same
mass of other air molecules to raise its temperature the same
amount.
Thus as the water vapor content of the air increases the atmosphere
will heat and cool slower than when the air is drier. This process
tends to keep the temperature from rising as high during the day or
cooling as much at night, although the increase in the overnight low
may lead to an increase in the daytime temperature because the air
doesn't have to heat as much to reach a higher temperature. In
equatorial areas deserts have higher maximum temperatures and lower
minimum temperatures than jungle areas where the humidity is higher.
Water vapor possesses what physicists have traditionally called
"latent" heat. Latent heat refers to the heat energy water molecules
must absorb to go from a solid to a liquid (heat of fusion 80
calories/gram) or a liquid to a gas(heat of vaporization 540
calories/gram). This energy isn't reflected in the temperature of
the water vapor. However, when water vapor condenses back to a
liquid, or freezes, the release of this latent heat can raise the
temperature of the air. A gram of water vapor releases enough heat
energy when it condenses to raise the temperature of 2 kg of air by
1 C.
At approximately 65 F water vapor in the atmosphere holds as much
heat energy as the rest of the atmosphere. This
condition explains why dew points above 65 F are associated with the
strongest thunderstorms.
Physicists define a "calorie" as the amount of heat required to
raise the temperature of a gram of water 1 C. 27 C (82 F) is the
same temperature as 300 Kelvin [the absolute temperature scale]. At
300 K water vapor has 300 calories of heat from its temperature and
620 calories of latent heat.
The dew point is the temperature at which water vapor will condense
on objects or aerosals. The dew point normally is the lowest
temperature the air will fall to. As the water vapor content of the
air increases the dew point rises and the air doesn't get as cool at
night.
The situation is more complex than I am presenting it in this post.
I . The important facts to consider are that increases in humidity
can raise the low, or minimum temperature, and limit the high, or
maximum temperature, each day. In areas where significant
snowfall occurs, the increase in low temperature
can increase the melting of snow and ice by keeping the
temperature above freezing for longer periods of time.
I recently came across a 10 year old study done by David R. Easterling of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Climatic
Data Center in Asheville, N.C., indicating that humidy had increased
and, as should have been expected, the minimum temperature had been
increasing and the difference between the minimum and maximum daily
temperatures, diurnal temperature range (DTR), had been declining.
The potential impact of changes in atmospheric water vapor are real
science. Water vapor holds a substantial amount of heat energy. The
only potential impact climatologists can find for carbon dioxide is
the highly questionable claim about absorbing and re-radiating low
energy IR. But then, if would be difficult for the politicians
behind the global warming scare to make a case for getting rid of
water.
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