And yes the battery
temp increases while the handset is charged (41 degrees).
If the mwp is accepted back into the historical temp record we may find, for example, that the correlation between certain forcings and global
temp increase while others decrease.
Not exact matches
According to Statistics Canada, the employment services industry grew from $ 8.3 billion in 2009 to $ 11.5 billion in 2012; and
while this category includes everything from executive headhunters to day labour, other data suggests it's
temp work driving the
increase.
I have
increased cooking
temp while decreasing time,
increased time and decreased cooking
temp... This time I cooked them at 300 degrees for 20 min
while using my convection (professional range)... Still same results.
While an
increase in the amount of radiation the Earth receives by trapping outgoing IR would
increase surface
temps, would the
increased surface
temp not
increase the convection and evaporation rates introducing a negative feedback?
The study found that after watermelon was picked and stored at room
temp, levels of the protective phytochemical lycopene
increased by up to 40 %,
while levels of beta - carotene rose by nearly 140 %.
This truck only idles at around 550 RPM from the factory, and
increasing the throttle to around 1,000 RPM
while in park or neutral seemed to improved the outlet
temps at idle by just a couple degrees, so I don't think it's all in the idle.
This would certainly explain why arctic sea ice cover has been absolutely crashing in recent years
while the HARDCRU / GISS global average
temps had been
increasing more modestly.
While some lag might be intuitively expected, remember, we are looking at the rate of
increase of CO2 vs
temp, so an instantaneous response makes a lot of sense.
This is a very active time in climatology, the big news is
temps have stopped rising,
while Co2 continues to
increase.
Peak
temps were reached and
temps declined
while atmospheric CO2 was still
increasing.
While the ice build up is likely slow due to decreasing
temps, the eventual
increasing temperature begins to melt massive ice dams slowly at first with little change down stream.
Therefore,
while past periods of
temp / CO2 rise may tell us something about feedback (orbital variation can not account for the total temperature rise during interlgacials), they do not tell us what happens if the CO2
increase precedes temperature
increases.
However if there was and
increase in
temp and this
increase lasted a
while - lets say 20 years.
Well, the AGW crowd may have just received their «out» for a multi-decadal lull (or at least «below predicted trend») in
temp increases,
while still insisting the longer - term picture has not changed.
2) The satellite tropospheric and sea surface (SST) data differ from the HADCRUT surface
temp anomaly, with the present temperatures of both right at the same level as in 1991 (
while Fig. 1 here shows an
increase over 1991 of about 0.25 °C).
And yet in moderate humidity (60 % or so), you can see a 10 + degree F drop in temperature / hour after dark,
while the average
temp drop /
increase per day globally is ~ 18F.
If we may assume that the short term CO2 /
temp ratio and the longer term ratio are the same, then the 0.6 °C
increase in the period 1959 - 2004 has
increased the CO2 level with 1.8 ppmv,
while the observed
increase is 60 ppmv... Even if we use the long term ratio (10 ppmv / °C for MWP - LIA), then the influence of temperature over the whole period is only 6 ppmv.
This is a crucial point; in my opinion it is defeated by the decrease in
temp from 1940 - 1976 and from 1995/8; but rather go down the aerosol path again the PETM is of interest; the PETM is often put forward as an example of CO2 / ghg forcing but
temp increase preceded the
increase in CO2; the
temp recovery to pre-PETM levels, given the 70 %
increase in CO2 and sudden spike in
temp of over 6C, was very quick [between 30 - 80k]; but the
temp recovery happened
while CO2 levels stayed high.
Utilizing a
temp - to - hire strategy to managing
increasing labor requirements
while containing labor costs.