The radiative Greenhouse Effect is continually overridden as a result of the size of the constant interlinked changes in both the solar energy input to the oceans and
the oceanic heat inputs to the atmosphere.
The atmospheric Greenhouse Effect merely sets a theoretical background atmospheric temperature level that is continually overridden as a result of the size of the constant interlinked changes in both the solar and
oceanic heat inputs.
Not exact matches
Scientists now estimate that the circulation of seawater through the
oceanic crust accounts for 34 % of the
heat input into the global oceans, about 25 % of the globe's total
heat input.
Possible reasons include increased
oceanic circulation leading to increased subduction of
heat into the ocean, higher than normal levels of stratospheric aerosols due to volcanoes during the past decade, incorrect ozone levels used as
input to the models, lower than expected solar output during the last few years, or poorly modeled cloud feedback effects.
Nature (with hopefully some constructive
input from humans) will decide the global warming question based upon climate sensitivity, net radiative forcing, and
oceanic storage of
heat, not on the type of multi-decadal time scale variability we are discussing here.
Geomagnetic storms hit the Arctic, induce strong currents, disturbing the Earth's field and feed back into the
oceanic currents, releasing some of the stored
heat during the previous cycle (with less geomagnetic
input):
Geomagnetic storms hit the Arctic, induce strong currents, disturbing the Earth's field and feed back into the
oceanic currents, releasing some of the stored
heat during the previous cycle (with less geomagnetic
input): http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/Spc.htm