Saturday, May 27, 2023

Peter Wadhams: The Arctic is warming seven times faster than the rest of the planet! "very frightening"

 Peter Wadhams in new talk  starts about 55 minutes in.

um the ocean is warming very much faster than it used to um B uh in fact it says now uh reached a factor of seven compared to the speed at which um the you know the ocean surface waters were
warming so this is a huge acceleration an exponential growth in uh in CR seawater temperatures and um nobody knows why it's happening um it's but it's a factor it is a fact of the bus sudden in the Arctic compared to other other parts of the ocean so it used to be when when I was working in the Arctic a lot we'd have about two to three times the speed of of um warming the Arctic compared to other parts of the ocean uh and we'd uh we'd have to
work on that basis of what uh how fast the various other other parts of the
world were warming up but now that fractal has just gone up to seven
without any orange 
seven times as fast yeah if you look at the the Seas North of Europe that is the
balance sea uh currency um the season around spitsburg and that
that's seven times which is just incredible because that that's an amount
of warming which will get rid of all the sea ice very quickly and will make other
changes as well and then in fact the temperature changes have been incredible as well when you
look at those um the biggest warming has been in the
Seas North East of Europe uh so North Eastern America that is Canada at the
very the very Waters that we thought about uh being the place we should go to
to preserve sea ice um but instead in fact um is warming the
fastest of all there and there have been measurements of a warming of about 13
degrees uh in the Seas North of Newfoundland and Labrador and 13 degrees
uh is is simply not something that ever happens before you know you you get you
get changes in climate changes in in weather systems changes in in everything
now but it's always something measurable something you can
handle all right two or three degrees and then and that's it but this is now
if you're talking about 13 degrees this game over isn't it isn't anything
available that can possibly slow anything that's going
uh yes that's right it's a game
over situation but uh when we look at the uh oceanographers who are working
there it's only just been discovered how rapidless
growth is and and they're all they're sort of numbed like you you normally uh
when you look at an ocean scientists they're always very confident about they
measure something in the ocean which is a bit odd they'll say we have discovered that uh
such and such a c is now warmed up by one degree it's always we have
discovered because they really like to discover things that they can publish and get a promotions on
um but uh in this case we've got um they they they
has it incredibly hesitant to say we have discovered because if they if they
if people accept that that this is going on they have to try and explain it and
there's absolutely no explanation for why there should be such a rapid huge growth rate in temperature of uh
North Atlantic water this is something which can't be explained and so
therefore scientists say nothing about it until they can come up with some explanation so that it's mysterious
silence coming from the scientific Community about these extraordinary
warming rates of the ocean well
yes right there's no there's no known
way that um if you um if you look at say
Northeastern Atlantic and and it's warmed up by that amount what can you do
what do you do there's nothing that you can think of that you can actually do that will stop that
um it's a bit like the um in Siberia the
the the warming rates that are going on uh because of
um methane outbreaks a sort of methane explosions going on and um they're they're they
have huge amounts of heat involved there and not to mention the fact that a lot
of the the tundra is caught fire and is far burning away perpetually but there's
still not enough known about how you might possibly deal with it for people
to to talk about it so again there's a sort of a code of silence
  problems with with them
with Siberia and Siberian um methane outbreaks and that's another
forbidden this forbidden topics that the scientists don't like to talk about unless they can see some solution and if
they don't see the solution they just hope that nobody will notice that it's
happening
it depends if we if we're
talking about these uh um kind of fossil flows so to speak of
the way uh the world was uh in in June
uh into the last message that's one thing but things that are happening now
of an unprecedented and sudden and this this temperature rise is very sudden and
frightening for that reason that um you you you don't expect water
to warm up that quickly what what's warming it I mean you have to supply heat to to warm the water and if you if
you're looking at the Northeast Atlantic then you're you're dealing with a part
of the world that's where you you think you have some confidence about
um how warm it is uh how it changes with season
um you know you you if you're you know you think about all the people who've worked up there and sailed up there
and so on and uh they they know what temperatures the
water will reach um and so everything is uh you feel
confident and happy about it until suddenly you're going to take a thermometer out and and it gives you
temperatures 10 or 13 degrees warmer than it has any right to be
um it's it's a frightening Discovery and nobody knows how to explain it you'll
like him do you ever thought about it yeah yeah I've got a question for you
um 

well actually that's a good point um the uh in fact I I wrote a paper about that
with a colleague but I'm not quite sure that I remember the point we may but um
the the person who thought about that a lot uh was Walter Monk and he's he's a
kind of God well he actually died recently at the age of 102 but he's the
sort of God of oceanography um he he everybody acknowledges him as
as the person who who did more in oceanography than anybody else he's a
great man um and uh we we wrote a paper together on on uh changes due to Sea ice and what
he was doing and um he thought well look you're you're
you're dumping all this extra ice onto onto the ice sheets and uh you are
changing the the rotation of the earth because you're changing the the uh
um uh the what's the name of this am I
trying to remember my O-level physics uh it's the the
well when you have something rotating with a bigger moment
um then well the current coriolin Sports well it's it's moment of inertia
um but anyway the thing is you you will change the rate of rotation of the Earth
by a tiny amount if you uh alter the where you where you put the ice if you
melt the ice or you or you just redistribute it put it somewhere
um further away from the equator or closer to the pressure it's how far it is from the equator that matters
so we we wrote that up and um
that then he died soon after that and uh we
that was that was it uh as far as could they measure it I mean if if there had
been a change in the in the orbit or something I don't know what the word is but if there had been a change wouldn't
it wouldn't have been detected with some I don't know satellites or something
oh yes I mean I'm sure uh the day the time we wrote that was was
some time ago a few years ago but what you can do now
um is use this uh satellite called Grace
which means gravity gravity satellite uh you it is it's too it's very very clever
it's actually two satellites close together a few few kilometers apart
flying around the world together and uh as you fly and they're very heavy
deliberately heavy and when you fly over the edge of a continent like the edge of
Greenland one of the the satellite that's in the lead speeds up
um because of the change in the mass that's underneath it and then the second
satellite catches up on it so and they are very very accurate lasers to to work
out how far they are apart so these satellites slightly change their relative positions or through or through
the orbital period and and you can work out how uh how heavy it is well how
heavy is the ice underneath so it would tell you the the volume of eye the green
and ice sheet instance which you could never do before so that that ought to
also show what would happen if you altered the amount of ice
um due to this um this satellite orbit thing so I'm sure that that we can we
can measure it and somebody has measured it I'm sure uh so
it all in theory is can be solved and we we can see what's what's going on but um 
 
 the solar photons come in at high frequency and then radiate off Earth at infrared low frequency. The lowering of the frequency increases the entropy because in quantum physics the momentum of energy is directly proportional to the frequency. So as a particle goes towards the speed of light its frequency increases (and wavelength decreases) but also its time increases by slowing down, due to relativity. Logically, as Nobel physicist Louis de Broglie realized, this means since frequency is inverse to time, there HAS to be a time-reversed negative frequency signal that is a negentropy or negative entropy creating life on Earth from the gravitational potential energy. This is called the Law of Phase Harmony and was considered by Louis de Broglie to be his greatest discovery - unfortunately it's not taught in physics classes.
"Since heat capacity is always a positive value, entropy must increase as the temperature increases.Jul 20, 2022" 
You can read the book, "Life on the Edge" (2016 science award from the Royal Society" to learn more about negative entropy or Negentropy that was first discussed in Erwin Schrodinger's book, "What Is Life?" 1945 - as part of his quantum physics analysis.
So as the CO2 amount in the atmosphere increases this also increases the frequency range or wavelength range that resonates or absorbs and reflects back the infrared photon energy into earth from the atmosphere. This is why the top of the stratosphere is cooling while the lower atmosphere is heating up. The oceans absorb about 40% of the CO2 but over 90% of the heat. So there's over 250 Zettajoules of heat that have accumulated in the oceans since 1995, causing stratification of the oceans. This means the ocean temperature is no longer mixing correctly to drive the ecological dynamics for life on Earth since most of the oxygen for life on Earth is from the diatoms in the oceans. Again our current CO2 emissions is 100 times greater than in the past 500 million years.

The Right To Be Let Alone: 1890 law article, "right to privacy" to 1920 Supreme Court Privacy Dissent needs to be ReEmbraced

 In 1928, Justice Brandeis eloquently disagreed with the majority decision in Olmstead v. United States that wiretapping did not require a warrant because it involved no physical trespass. The framers of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments, he argued,

 “sought to protect Americans in their beliefs, their thoughts, their emotions, and their sensations. They conferred, as against the Government, the right to be let alone—the most comprehensive of rights and the one most valued by civilized men.” 

His views on wiretapping ultimately prevailed, as did his belief that privacy was a constitutionally protected right.

 https://groups.csail.mit.edu/mac/classes/6.805/articles/privacy/Privacy_brand_warr2.html

 the right to property secured to the individual his lands and his cattle. Later, there came a recognition of man's spiritual nature, of his feelings and his intellect. Gradually the scope of these legal rights broadened; and now the right to life has come to mean the right to enjoy life, -- the right to be let alone;  the right to liberty secures the exercise of extensive civil privileges; and the term "property" has grown to comprise every form of possession -- intangible, as well as tangible.....

The intensity and complexity of life, attendant upon advancing civilization, have rendered necessary some retreat from the world, and man, under the refining influence of culture, has become more sensitive to publicity, so that solitude and privacy have become more essential to the individual; but modern enterprise and invention have, through invasions upon his privacy, subjected him to mental pain and distress, far greater than could be inflicted by mere bodily injury.

 

The general object in view is to protect the privacy of private life,

It is believed that the common law provides him with one, forged in the slow fire of the centuries, and to-day fitly tempered to his hand. The common law has always recognized a man's house as his castle, impregnable, often, even to his own officers engaged in the execution of its command. Shall the courts thus close the front entrance to constituted authority, and open wide the back door to idle or prurient curiosity?

 https://www.mtsu.edu/first-amendment/article/232/gilbert-v-minnesota

Gilbert delivered a speech in August 1917 at a public meeting of the NPL in Red Wing, Minnesota, in which he said that “if they conscripted wealth like they conscripted men the war would not last 48 hours” and “if this is a great democracy, why should we not vote on the conscription of men?” He went on to state “we were stampeded into this war by newspaper rot to pull England’s chestnuts out of the fire!”

Gilbert was arrested for violating the Minnesota sedition statute that made it illegal “to speak, or teach, by word of mouth opposition to the war, or to advocate against enlistment.”

  Justice Louis D. Brandeis also dissented, arguing that the Minnesota law outlawed beliefs, not just actions, and that it would invade the private security of the family if it prevented a father from advising his son not to join the army for reasons of conscience or religion. He added that the statute deprived persons of rights guaranteed by the Constitution.

In citing a long list of cases that showed the use of due process to protect property rights, he observed sarcastically, “I cannot believe that the liberty guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment includes only liberty to acquire and to enjoy property.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mixing phosphoric acid into Chassis Saver Polyurethane paint to spray inside Chassis? Maybe

 UPDATE: I did do this experiment - it seemed to have worked a bit. thanks

https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&ved=2ahUKEwiN0uzG7ZX_AhV3AzQIHdXEDQMQFnoECBQQAQ&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.usbr.gov%2Fresearch%2Fprojects%2Fdownload_product.cfm%3Fid%3D2751&usg=AOvVaw2uHC7H71T1_UB61ACN9T-p

pdf link

  iron phosphate coatings are typically utilized to improve the
adhesion of subsequent layers of paint to the substrate [19].

The phosphating process forms a thin film that neutralizes the potential of the anodic sites on the
substrate and impedes the corrosion reaction [20]. Concurrently, the substrate is positively
charged, increasing the number of active bonding sites.

The phosphating process can involve many steps depending on the desired result. Phosphating
procedures may include surface activation prior to immersing in the phosphating solution, a
neutralizing rinse after the initial rinse, application of additional coatings or sealers after drying,
or other additional steps [14]. The simplest iron phosphating procedure is as follows

  phosphating
has been vital to the automotive industry to prevent the development of corrosion and improve
adhesion of vehicle body paint [22]. For over 50 years, phosphating has also been a critical
practice in metal processing, advancements in dentistry, and the appliance industry, among other
industries [23].

In addition to being a component of a phosphating solution, phosphoric acid can also be utilized
as an additive to polyurethane coatings to improve adhesion [24]. 

 In general, the use of phosphoric acid derivatives as additives did not result in an increase in adhesion values.

David Chester, Ph.D. physics, presents the noncommutative "two, three and infinity" concept in terms of geometry (not frequency)

 

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z8lCtrIpcjI 2 hours 44 minutes in David Chester says: 

"There's two different ways to interpret the same thing. One thing is to say, "Hey, all these edge lengths are unit 1." This, it was a 2 x 2 square, from P to Q is length 2, from up here to here is 2, 2, 2. It's all length two. So when I add this third point, I graph here at the level, I have the freedom to decide how I interpret the geometry. And so I could say, "This whole length is length two or I could say, "No, this length is one and now it's three." So if you say that this is length three, that when you do the holonomy thing, you're saying it's torsion. But you could also say, "No, the calibration of my ruler got deformed, actually when I transported this vector along this point, it actually changed lengths, such that this whole side length stays lengths two, such that this little length right here is now 2/3rd instead of 1." And so it's the same defect, the thing, but now we're just saying there's no torsion, it's non-metricity. So it's ambiguous....Because in the language of the defects, I'm saying, "Hey, energy and momentum and stress sources these 2D wedge disclinations as curvature." But Cartan introduced these line defects which Einstein eventually used for his teleparallel theory." 

This is very similar to Alain Conne's claim of infinite factorizations of infinite degrees as "two, three, infinity" from nonlocal noncommutative time-frequency. In music theory 2/3 is C to F as undertone while C to G is 3/2 as overtone - this is NOT allowed in commutative geometry yet it's empirically true. See Connes' lecture, "Music of Shapes" for details. thanks

 Why do Alice and Bob have to "observe" and why "raise eyebrows"? Why don't Alice and Bob LISTEN instead? haha. Because there's a secret to listening that Anirban Bandypadhyay tapped into when he discovered ultrasound is a 3000 times greater quantum coherence conductance of the negative refractive metamaterials in the neurons - the microtubules and tubulins as nonlocal noncommutative superradiance. This is the true secret of antigravity as documented with Saint Joseph de Copertino. Qigong grandmaster Chunyi Lin who works with Mayo Clinic doctors, he also levitated up 9 feet after he finished his nonstop 28 day cave meditation in full lotus yoga position, with no sleep - just "listening" with his eyes closed (and third eye open). hahaha. Guenter Nimtz has already demonstrated superluminal acoustic phonon signals as long as we understand the signal is not defined by a commutative geometry symmetric amplitude as energy, rather the signal is the phase time-reversed inversion of frequency - so a noncommutative negative frequency that is nonlocal.

 Roger Penrose already debunked the weak equivalence principle via his palatial twistor analysis of quantum nonlocality as noncommutative protoconsciousness.

 people are claiming we HAVE to leave Earth! Hilarious - like they assume we already destroyed Earth - and therefore we'll have great skills to create another Earth? hilarious.

"These simulations express an evolutionary process leading to humans and on up through higher levels of biological and technological evolution."
Hi David Chester: I actually was certified in conservation biology as a semester of study in Costa Rica in 1992, the same year E.O. Wilson published his biodiversity book on the "crisis of mass extinction of species." Conservation biologist Michael Soule pointed out that large mammals stopped evolving in the 1970s due to "lack of habitat." Conservation biologist professor emeritus Guy McPherson has pointed out the near-term human extinction due to this acceleration of "biological annihilation" (a googlescholar term in peer-reviewed journals by various biology professors).
The emergence of biological life and its ability to preserve nonequilibrium states has puzzled many.
Schrodinger introduced a term called negative entropy [95], which was later shortened to negentropy.
Glad to see you engaging with this issue! Did you realize that Jordan Pascual in the 1930s already argued noncommtuativity self-amplifies into the macroscale from quantum nonlocality? haha. He was the first real quantum biologist in that sense. Pascual is mentioned in the Royal Society award-winning quantum biology book, "Life on the Edge." (2016).
Furthermore, humanity’s recent hacking of evolutionary biology, via CRISPR gene editing, is likely to allow rapid evolution of consciousness
in the future—designer consciousness—that can make mind-simulations even more powerful.
This claim is devoid of the corporate-state science context of genetic engineering science. The human genome is not the deciding factor in terms of evolution when there is complex feedback and a supercomputer can not even model the ecology of an equatorial rainforest! haha.
Julian Huxley, whom you cite favorably, was one of the first promoters of eugenics as transhumanism along with Oliver L. Reiser - that I exposed in 2001 as part of the "Actual Matrix Plan" based on the "music logarithmic spiral."
This is why I have always focused on interdisciplinary research because when people become specialized with Ph.Ds then there's too little knowledge of the gaps between the disciplines. I discovered this from my undergraduate degree in International Relations that was supposed to combine or integrate economics with biology and political science as "sustainable development" back in 1994. hahaha.
thanks again,
drew hempel