Hot air masses from South Asia and Africa now sit over Siberia and the Russian Arctic (Pokrovsky) and in the first part of July low pressure has become more dominant in the central Arctic Ocean, which could set up northward drift along
with warm air transport in the East Siberian and Laptev Seas (Maslanik).
Not exact matches
By analogy, a
warmer world wouldn't be rainier (or cloudier); it's an imperfect analogy, because rain isn't absolutely correlated
with cloudiness, and lateral
transport of energy by ocean,
air, and latent heat currents in and out of the E & W Pacific Ocean areas won't scale to global
warming
The
warm air above nocturnal or polar inversions, or even stable
air masses
with small positive lapse rates, are
warmer than otherwise because of heat capacity and radiant + convective heating during daytime and / or because of heating occurring at other latitudes / regions that is
transported to higher latitudes / regions.
The «Clean Sky» initiative, reports Israel21c is the largest European research project ever and is designed to tackle global
warming —
with a budget estimated to reach over 1.6 billion Euros, the project «aims to radically improve the impact of
air transport on the environment
with the goal of eliminating environmental pollution by reducing greenhouse gases.»
With the source regions
warming, the polar and artic
air masses would modify (
warm), and the mechanism that
transports them equatorward (the polar jet) would weaken.
I don't care about the real DALR in the real atmosphere, which is an utterly dynamic quantity that is basically never precisely observed and which is derived, using a bunch of approximations and assumptions that include active
transport of
air parcels and «0» conductivity, to provide us
with some insight into why the atmosphere does remain
warmer at the bottom than at the top.
From what you are saying though, is that meridional heat
transport mechanisms will force cooler
air or
warmer air over the antarctic and drag along the appropriate CO2 concentration along
with it.