Dear Alan;

You are trying to deny the elephant sized apple in the room-- your effort 
to redefine 'nuclear winter '  downward amonts to raw semantic aggresion in 
the light of  how Carl Sagan made its quantitative meaning  perfectly clear 
by telling a national television audience it was "precisely" like the K-T 
impact. 

That astronomical megahype leaves you, as the neologism's defender, to 
explain to us why you and a few true believers are still enamored of the 
phrase when both parameter studies and more sophisticated  models have so 
thoroughly defrosted it?

The numbers talk, even if you don't like the look of them side by side 
- TTAPS  publicists( Porter Novelli) were retained before the  paper was 
published to  create a cold war factoid by applying the tern to a fruit 
salad of over twenty ( not three)  scenarios. Some were based on 
non-existant arsenals and others injected* no *smoke or carbon black into 
the atmosphere,  let alone the 5 Tg  Alan has modeled. The failure of Sagan 
to incorporate ocean thermal mass from the one dimensional model TTAPS  was 
one of many reasons  Steve Schneider took him to task in Foreign Affairs. 

Another was Sagan's insistance in its pages that just the sort of low-yield 
regional exchange Alan has modeled " a pure tactical exchange, in Europe 
say" fought with sub-Hiroshima yield  neutron bombs would still precipiate 
a global deep freeze. 


History is full of prophets of doom who fail to deliver, but I appreciate 
that you have wisely refrained from emulating TTAPS most unrealistic 
parameterizations in your  work. So would I, because the early models 
larger-than-life fuel loadings and arsenals have long since been 
discredited . perhaps you should recall the sober title of the  *Ambio* article 
in which Paul Crutzen first broached the subject ; *Twilight at Noon*,

That phrase  pretty well nails what you've modeled, and may indeed explain 
why first broad-ranging study to review the TTPS results,  the 1985 NAS 
/NRC report*The Effects on the Atmosphere of a Major Nuclear Exchange  *does 
not  even contain the expression 'nuclear winter , and succesive 
generations of more advanced models all failed to reproduce the " 
apocalyptic predictions" publicized at the Cold War's height.

Having known Sin at Hiroshima, science was bound to  run into advertising 
sooner  or later - anybody can  tell a systems programmer to paint a model 
sky pitch black but justifying such an action on retrospect is an 
altogether different matter..

On Wednesday, September 26, 2012 7:49:34 PM UTC-4, Alan Robock wrote:
>
>  Dear Russell,
>
> You are comparing apples and oranges, or apples and something that is not 
> even fruit.  Are you doing this on purpose to fool readers or did you not 
> even read the papers and understand what was done?
>
> Here are the differences:
>
> 1.  TTAPS looked at three scenarios of global nuclear war, and our 
> scenario was only 100 Hiroshima size weapons, with a total explosive power 
> of 1.5 MT (which could produce 5 Tg of smoke).  So the scenarios differ by 
> factors of 67 to 6,667 in terms of explosive power and about 100 in terms 
> of smoke generated for the TTAPS baseline case.  Why would you expect the 
> response to be the same?
>
> 2.  The TTAPS model had no heat capacity at the surface, so it was a model 
> of the response in a continental interior.  I think what you plotted was 
> our global average response.  The globe is 70% ocean.  So the global 
> average response would be more than10 times smaller than the middle of a 
> continent.
>
> Do you think anyone will be fooled by your figure?  Wouldn't you be 
> surprised if the response did not differ by factors of 100 to 1000?
>
>    
> Alan
>
> Alan Robock, Professor II (Distinguished Professor)
>   Editor, Reviews of Geophysics
>   Director, Meteorology Undergraduate Program
>   Associate Director, Center for Environmental Prediction
> Department of Environmental Sciences              Phone: +1-848-932-5751
> Rutgers University                                  Fax: +1-732-932-8644
> 14 College Farm Road                   E-mail: [email protected] 
> <javascript:>
> New Brunswick, NJ 08901-8551  USA      http://envsci.rutgers.edu/~robock
>
> On 9/26/2012 6:32 PM, Russell Seitz wrote:
>  
> Here are the time-temperature curves of the 1983 'nuclear winter ' model, 
> and those  of Robock et al. 2007 , superimposed on the same scale: 
>
>  
>
> http://s1098.photobucket.com/albums/g370/RussellSeitz/?action=view&current=TTAPSROBOCK.jpg
>
>  
>
>    
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