How Little We Know About The Weather

From: Libertarian News



It may come as a surprise to many, but modern science has very little to say about most of the weather we observe on a daily basis. Here are a few quotes to demonstrate what Im talking about.


Scientists are still puzzled as to what triggers a spark during a thunderstorm. The latest attempt to answer the question only adds to the intrigue. It seems hard to believe that we still dont understand what causes lightning during thunderstorms but thats a fact.

BBCs Phillip Ball


Yep, scientists cant tell you what causes lightning to form. However, they claim that they can predict what the global climate will be nearly a century from now.


How about tornadoes?


We dont know if a particular storm will produce a tornado so the truth is we really dont know what causes a tornado. We do know the necessary conditions needed for tornado formation.

– Steven A. Ackerman and Jonathan Martin, professors in the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences at UW-Madison.


And what about clouds?


Climatologists are remarkably mum on the subject of clouds. While they have plenty of theories about cloud formation, virtually none of them address why clouds appear as they do. Obviously an attractive and repulsive force is necessary for the water droplets in a cloud to stick together cohesively the way they do. There is only one obvious force that meets this requirement, and its not dark matter.


A few scientists have seen the light, or should I say charge? A recent study by Giles Harrison and Maarten Ambaum, from the University of Reading, found that the electrical connection between Earth and its surrounding electrified plasma environment may play a much larger role in driving Earths weather than anyone previously realized. Particularly interesting is the possibility that space weather changes could affect weather in the lower atmosphere, Harrison notes in a recent PhysicsWorld article.


The realization that the electrical heartbeat of the planet plays a role in the formation of layer clouds indicates that existing models for clouds and climate are still missing potentially important components, adds Ambaum. Understanding these missing elements is crucial to improve the accuracy of our weather forecasts and predicting changes to our climate.


That article was from this past March. Does anyone think the climate models predicting doom for the planet have incorporated this finding into their research? I doubt it.


The Earths weather is obviously highly electrical. From lighting storms to cloud cohesion, the electrical forces of weather are on display for all to see. However, the vast majority of climate scientists want nothing to do with electricity. Electricity screws up their models and injects a climate driver that they cant model nor predict. Harrison should be nominated for Understatement of the Year with his comment.


In fact, Harrison and Ambaum arent the only climatologists to see a connection between Earths weather and space. Looking at hurricanes, a recent study by N.V. Isaev et al, noted that, In some cases the typhoon eye is formed over the tropical depression zone in the ionosphere, that is, the region with sharply decreased plasma density and pressure is observed a day and more prior to the moment when it happens in the atmosphere. The ionosphere is a region of electrified plasma on the edge of space that surrounds the planet.


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