Poster's note : an older paper, but one that didn't make it to the
list.  A worthwhile airing of a fascinating 'sci fi' topic

http://rsta.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/370/1974/4197

The runaway greenhouse: implications for future climate change,
geoengineering and planetary atmospheres

Colin Goldblatt, Andrew J. Watson
DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2012.0004
Published 6 August 2012

Abstract

The ultimate climate emergency is a ‘runaway greenhouse’: a hot and
water-vapour-rich atmosphere limits the emission of thermal radiation
to space, causing runaway warming. Warming ceases only after the
surface reaches approximately 1400 K and emits radiation in the
near-infrared, where water is not a good greenhouse gas. This would
evaporate the entire ocean and exterminate all planetary life. Venus
experienced a runaway greenhouse in the past, and we expect that the
Earth will in around 2 billion years as solar luminosity increases.
But could we bring on such a catastrophe prematurely, by our current
climate-altering activities? Here, we review what is known about the
runaway greenhouse to answer this question, describing the various
limits on outgoing radiation and how climate will evolve between
these. The good news is that almost all lines of evidence lead us to
believe that is unlikely to be possible, even in principle, to trigger
full a runaway greenhouse by addition of non-condensible greenhouse
gases such as carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. However, our
understanding of the dynamics, thermodynamics, radiative transfer and
cloud physics of hot and steamy atmospheres is weak. We cannot
therefore completely rule out the possibility that human actions might
cause a transition, if not to full runaway, then at least to a much
warmer climate state than the present one. High climate sensitivity
might provide a warning. If we, or more likely our remote descendants,
are threatened with a runaway greenhouse, then geoengineering to
reflect sunlight might be life's only hope. Injecting reflective
aerosols into the stratosphere would be too short-lived, and even
sunshades in space might require excessive maintenance. In the distant
future, modifying Earth's orbit might provide a sustainable solution.
The runaway greenhouse also remains relevant in planetary sciences and
astrobiology: as extrasolar planets smaller and nearer to their stars
are detected, some will be in a runaway greenhouse state.

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