Professor Toby Ault from Cornell University department of Earth & Atmospheric Sciences demonstrates the greenhouse effect on the planet Earth using an ...
2035 Cornell Climate Action Plan
Data for Climate Change Research
Art Degaetano, Professor and Associate Chair, Department of Earth and Atmospheric Science, Cornell University, delivers the November 1, 2010 Department of ...
I don't believe at all that you can compare the direction of a paper sheet
falling down with climate trends.
We know very well that on a falling paper there is a main force acting on
it. That's why we know that the paper is going to fall down when it's free
to do it. On the contrary, there is not a main single force driving the
climate changes. That's why you can't make a model . . .
When researchers will be able to forecast the weather, maybe they will be
able to calculate the climate changes too. In the meanwhile, your
predictions models are uselss.
Regards, Antonello
While the model is based on good information, i am not sure they have
enough data to make judgement outside of correlation. This seems to be a
case of scientists explaining what they observe instead of trying to get a
better understanding first.
Regional climate change in the Northeast U.S. ...
and the art of down-scaling global climate model output Art Degaetano, Professor Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Cornell University Plant ...