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An updated review on carbon dioxide and climate change

5th World Conference on Climate Change and Global Warming

Rex J Fleming

Global Aerospace, LLC, USA

Keynote: J Earth Sci Clim Change

DOI: 10.4172/2157-7617-C1-038

Abstract
This manuscript will review the essence of the role of CO2 in the Earth�s atmosphere. The logic of CO2 involvement in changing the climate will be investigated from every perspective: reviewing the historical data record, examining in further detail the 20th century data record, and evaluating the radiation role of CO2 in the atmosphere � calculating and integrating the Schwarzschild radiation equation with a full complement of CO2 absorption coefficients. A review of the new theory of climate change � due to the Sun�s magnetic field interacting with cosmic rays is provided. The application of this new theory is applied to climate-change events within the latter part of the Earth�s interglacial period. The application of the new theory to the Earth�s Ice Ages is summarized along with a brief discussion of the role of cosmic rays in creating significant lower layer clouds which increase the albedo of the Earth. The results of this review point to the extreme value of CO2 to all life forms, but no role of CO2 in any significant change of the Earth�s climate.
Biography

Rex J Fleming has completed his PhD in 1970 from the University of Michigan. He spent the next 44 years in atmospheric research and program management in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and at the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR). He has served on NOAA’s Council for Long-term Climate Monitoring. He has published more than 25 papers in reputed journals. He has served as: Chairman, Probability and Statistics Committee, American Meteorological Society, AMS (1976-1977); Secretary, Atmospheric Science Section of the American Geophysical Union (1984-1986); and Member, AMS Board on Women and Minorities (1986-1991). He has received the Department of Commerce Gold Medal Award (1980) for outstanding achievement in directing the USA role in the Global Weather Experiment. He is an Elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). He continues to perform research within his own consulting company on nonlinear systems.

Email:rex@rexfleming.com
 

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