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On the issue of increasing carbon dioxide concentrations and global climate change

World Conference on Climate Change

Frederick House

Drexel University, USA

Keynote: J Earth Sci Clim Change

DOI: 10.4172/2157-7617.C1.026

Abstract
Greenhouse gases, in particular carbon dioxide, are responsible for warming the earth�s climate making the planet habitable for mankind. The physics of this warming is unquestioned. The big problem, of course, is there is no proper evidence of what causes warming. One would be astonished if mankind, with its prodigious release of greenhouse gases were not having an impact on climate. But how and how much are critical questions. This paper examines the question of how much, relative to increase in carbon dioxide. In general, climate scientists look at global warming as a time series of changing temperature along with a time series of carbon dioxide increase. The issue herein is using one series to explain the other, both of which are singular functions in time. This process seems to be a fault in their analysis procedures. This paper applies the technique of crosscorrelation, which is a standard method of estimating the degree to which two series are correlated. Global and hemispheric anomalies of temperature are taken from the HadCRUT4 (United Kingdom) data set and global carbon dioxide concentrations from the EPA (United States). The results indicate a relatively weak correlation of 0.691 globally, 0.689 and 0.662 for northern and southern hemispheres, respectively. A revealing correlation between temperature anomalies and sea level changes was a robust 0.89 as might be expected. Has the scientific community been overplaying the importance of carbon dioxide and not looking carefully at the evidence in front of them?
Biography

Frederick House received his BS degree in Meteorology from Penn State (1957) and served NATO forces in Europe as an Air Force Weather Officer. Upon discharge from service, he attended graduate school at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, receiving the MS degree in 1962 and PhD in Meteorology in 1965. Then he worked for the GCA Corporation in MA performing contract research for government and industry. In 1970, he came to Drexel University and taught physics and atmospheric science until retirement in August 2013. His research specialty is Satellite Meteorology with emphasis on earth radiation budget measurements and limb, scanning the stratosphere in the infrared spectrum.

Email: house.fred@gmail.com

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