In my opinion, a hurricane is a heat exchanger. The heat of our planet is
transfered to the cold open space. That is the reason why a hurricane cannot
heat any part of the planet, but on the contrary, it cool our planet. 
I dont agree with Alvia Gaskill. I am convinced that hurricanes dissipate
heat.
 
Cheers,
 
François MAUGIS.
======================================================================

  _____  

De : John Nissen [mailto:[email protected]] 
Envoyé : mercredi 3 juin 2009 16:37
À : [email protected]
Cc : [email protected]; f.m.maugis; [email protected]
Objet : Re: [geo] Re: Just in Time for Hurricane Season



Hi Ken,

Your paper implies that hurricanes can contribute to polar amplification,
hence providing positive feedback to global warming (and hence more extreme
hurricanes, etc.). Quoting from your paper:

"These results support the hypothesis that tropical cyclones play an active
role in the tropical surface ocean heat budget by cooling the tropical upper
oceans through enhanced vertical mixing, which likely represents a net
warming beneath the oceanic mixed layer. Thus, to the degree that vertical
mixing is important for regulating the ocean’s meridional overturning
circulation and poleward heat transport, tropical cyclones may be an
important contributor to Earth’s climate system. This further confirms the
results of Emanuel (2001, 2002) and Sriver and Huber (2007b) that possible
future changes in integrated cyclone intensity associated with warmer SST
may provide possible climatic feedbacks through enhanced vertical mixing and
increased ocean heat transport, thus buffering the tropics to increased
temperatures while amplifying the warming at higher latitudes."

Could Katrina, in August 2005, have contributed to warming the Gulf Stream
and hence to record Arctic sea ice melt in September 2007?  Anyway it seems
that hurricanes probably have a significant and dangerous contribution to
polar amplification, thus leading to more rapid Arctic sea ice retreat and
raising the threat of massive methane discharge and much enhanced global
warming*.

This hurricane effect, combined with the expected warmer sun and next El
Nino, could cause the sea ice to retreat much more rapidly than predicted,
and make even 2030 seem an optimistic forecast for its seasonal
disappearance.

Cheers,

John

* P.S.  Ken, do you still believe that methane is only a small risk, because
of paleo records?


Ken Caldeira wrote: 

You may find this pdf and the papers cited therein to be relevant to this
discussion:

http://web.ics.purdue.edu/~huberm/2007GC001842.pdf
<http://web.ics.purdue.edu/%7Ehuberm/2007GC001842.pdf> 

___________________________________________________
Ken Caldeira

Carnegie Institution Dept of Global Ecology
260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA

[email protected]; [email protected]
http://dge.stanford.edu/DGE/CIWDGE/labs/caldeiralab
+1 650 704 7212; fax: +1 650 462 5968  




On Tue, Jun 2, 2009 at 10:12 AM, Alvia Gaskill <[email protected]> wrote:


As the article indicates, what hurricanes do is move heat around, not
dissipate it.  Whether this actually cools the planet is unknown.  Given the
relatively small number of all tropical cyclones and their short lifetimes
of around a week or so, I doubt they matter very much on a global scale.
Another theory has them increasing atmospheric CO2 by stirring up surface
waters, although they may also reduce it by upwelling nutrients causing
phytoplankton blooms.   Global warming didn't stop because of all the storms
in 2005 (the year of Katrina) and it didn't get worse in the subsequent
years due to fewer storms.   
 
http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2009/01/29/hurricane-climate-02.html
 

Hurricanes' Climate Footprint Felt for Months

Michael Reilly, Discovery News
 

Jan. 29, 2009 -- Just as a changing climate shapes the strength and
frequency of hurricanes <http://science.howstuffworks.com/hurricane.htm> ,
the storms may have a huge effect on climate, leaving "footprints" in the
atmosphere and ocean. 

Watch a video on hurricane-prone coastlines.
<http://science.howstuffworks.com/hurricane.htm> 

Hurricanes are infamous as harbingers of chaos -- flooding cities, ripping
houses to shreds, destroying beaches and even whole islands. And concerns
are growing that human-induced climate change may lead to stronger storms
<http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2006/06/05/hurricane_pla.html>  whose
intensity will wreak even more havoc on coastal communities around the
world. 

But the full interplay between hurricanes and climate remains an enigma. 

Robert Hart of Florida State University analyzed two decades of climate data
from the tropics, and found that each storm leaves a wake of anomalously
cool water and warm air behind it that can persist anywhere from one to two
months, depending on the storm's strength. 

Scientists have known for years that hurricanes cause cool ocean waters to
well up, but Hart was surprised at how long the atmosphere
<http://science.howstuffworks.com/weather1.htm>  retained a "memory" of each
storm. 

That got him thinking: if one storm can have such a lasting impact, what
does a whole season of storms do to Earth's climate? Would there be a
difference in effect between an active hurricane season
<http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2008/09/03/tropical-storms-hurricane.html>
and a quiet one? 

Hart performed a series of calculations and came up with a striking
preliminary answer: hurricane seasons that spawned more storms (like 2005
<http://science.howstuffworks.com/most-destructive-storms2.htm> , for
example) led to quieter winters in the northern hemisphere, and quiet
hurricane seasons led to winters with lots of storm activity. 

The reason, Hart speculates, is that hurricanes bring large amounts of heat
out of the tropics and toward the poles. When a season has more storms, more
heat is deposited closer to the poles and the tropics are cooled off more,
so that when winter sets in there is less temperature difference between the
poles and tropics. 

"That's what winter weather is -- movement of heat between the tropics and
the poles," Hart said. "So it's possible that hurricanes do more than their
fair share of the work during an active season, and there's less work to be
done during the winter." 

Gabriel Vecchi of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association's
Geophyscial Fluid Dynamics Laboratory in Princeton, N.J., said Hart's work
gets at some of the toughest questions in meteorology today: What are
hurricanes? Do they serve a purpose? 

"It may sound like a stupid question, but I wonder what tropical cyclones'
role in the climate system is," he said. 

There are two general theories -- one which states that hurricanes are
simply the result of more potent forces, like El Nino pushing vast amounts
of heat and moisture around Earth's atmosphere. The other says hurricanes
are vital heat engines that transfer energy from the tropics toward the
poles. Through their fury, they are in fact bringing balance to the planet's
climate. 

"The list of results about how they affect climate is getting longer,"
Vecchi said. "This is all hinting that tropical cyclones do something
profound." 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: f.m.maugis <mailto:[email protected]>  
To: [email protected] ; [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, June 02, 2009 11:30 AM
Subject: RE: [geo] Just in Time for Hurricane Season

Why killing hurricanes, as far as they cool naturally our climate ?
 
François MAUGIS
http://assee.free.fr
===============================================
  _____  

De : [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] De la part de Alvia Gaskill
Envoyé : mardi 2 juin 2009 01:09
À : [email protected]
Objet : [geo] Just in Time for Hurricane Season


I was admittedly a little drowsy when I saw the promo for this, but it
appears to be another incarnation of the ocean pipes idea or perhaps the
same one from Atmocean.  One problem for would be hurricane killers is that
they seem to be appearing in places where they shouldn't, when they
shouldn't and rapidly intensifying, giving little time to react.  Thus,
strategies that prevent the conditions that drive hurricane development
should probably be considered before filling up the Gulf of Mexico and the
Atlantic with plastic pipes.  The cloud ships, the partial desert cover and
the stratospheric aerosols all could be part of the first line of defense.
 
http://science.discovery.com/tv-schedules/series.html?paid=48.15725.25642.34
394.3
 

NextWorld 
Future Danger 
TV-G 

Future Danger enters a world where robots safeguard our cities, massive
underwater heating and cooling systems break up hurricanes before they hit
land, and advanced rocket interceptors protect the planet from asteroids
that could wipe out humanity.
 
Air times in the U.S.: June 7, 9pm, June 8, 12am and June 9, 4 am.  60
minutes.

 
 
 
 
 








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