Not exact matches
The fan's height - adjustable feet allow the user to control the direction
of air circulation while its three -
speed setting generates a light breeze or swift wind.
The observed climate is just the equilibrium response to such variations with the positions
of the
air circulation systems and the
speed of the hydrological cycle always adjusting to bring energy differentials between all the many ocean and atmosphere layers back towards equilibrium (Wilde's Law?).
Additionally it is the
speed and flexibility
of the
circulations in the
air that enable it to deal quickly with any other change in resistor efficiency which is limited to the
air such as a change in the quantity
of greenhouse gases.
No significant imbalance occurs despite large changes in the rate
of energy release by the oceans and significant changes in the
speed of the hydrological cycle via changes in the
air circulation systems.
The observed climate is just the equilibrium response to such variations with the positions
of the
air circulation systems and the
speed of the hydrological cycle always adjusting to bring energy differentials above and below the troposphere back towards equilibrium (Wilde's Law?).
All I contend is that sun and oceans together with the variable
speed of the hydrological cycle assisted by the latitudinal movements
of the
air circulation systems and the vertical movement
of the tropopause overwhelmingly provide the background trend and combine to prevent changes in the
air alone changing the Earth's equilibrium temperature.
Changes in its
speed are achieved by latitudinal shifts in the
air circulation systems and by changes in the height
of the tropopause.
The
air circulation systems in both hemispheres move poleward and the ITCZ moves further north
of the equator as the
speed of the hydrological cycle increases due to the cooler stratosphere increasing the temperature differential between stratosphere and surface.
The
air circulation systems in both hemispheres move back equatorward and the ITCZ moves nearer the equator as the
speed of the hydrological cycle decreases due to the warming stratosphere reducing the temperature differential between stratosphere and surface.
This rising
air reinforces the
air that's already ascending from the surface, so the
circulation and wind
speeds of the storm increase.
I say this seems at odds with your statement «The observed climate is just the equilibrium response to such variations with the positions
of the
air circulation systems and the
speed of the hydrological cycle always adjusting to bring energy differentials above and below the troposphere back towards equilibrium (Wilde's Law?).»