UNLIMITED
I'm Neither Arrogant Nor Wrong by Solving Tornadoes: Physics of Storms and FlowUNLIMITED
How We Know Meteorology is Pretending To Understand Storms
UNLIMITED
How We Know Meteorology is Pretending To Understand Storms
ratings:
Length:
18 minutes
Released:
Dec 31, 2019
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Superstition and half-baked theory dominate the atmospheric sciences. Currently meteorological theories on atmospheric flow and storms maintain three superstitious and half-baked notions: 1) Convection. This is the superstition that evaporation makes air buoyant enough to power strong updrafts in the atmosphere (included in this is the strange belief that H2O in the atmosphere becomes gaseous at temperatures/pressures that have never been detected in a laboratory); 2) Dry layer capping. This is a superstition that imagines dry layers having structural properties that explain the how/why convection does not constantly produce storms and uplift; 3) Latent heat. This is the superstition that phase changes from a gaseous phase of H2O (which are purported to exist despite never having been detected and being inconsistent with what is indicated in the H2O phase table) to a liquid phase releases "latent heat" which itself has never been confirmed/verified. This was recorded 11/16/2019, or thereabouts.
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This episode is sponsored by
· Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
---
Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/james-mcginn/message
Released:
Dec 31, 2019
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
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