• @JustinAngel
    link
    1010 months ago

    I’m a climate idiot. Does this somehow relate to ice ages, I wonder?

    • @kinther
      link
      1310 months ago

      Ice ages typically happen due to very low insolation or the ability of solar energy to reach the surface of our planet. Insolation is a term often used when describing how much energy a solar panel can create.

      Right now we have a big problem with too many greenhouse gases, which exacerbate the insolation we already have. It is heating our oceans rapidly, thus causing the break up of ice sheets in the Arctic and Antarctica. At some point the oceans won’t be able to absorb the heat we are receiving and air temperatures will begin to rise as well. Equilibrium. Hence Venus by Tuesday.

      • Match!!
        link
        fedilink
        English
        510 months ago

        (like how ice keeps your drink from heating up)

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          310 months ago

          Narrator: … Thus solving the problem once and for all.

          Suzie: But–

          Narrator: Once and for all!

    • @Everythingispenguins
      link
      510 months ago

      So maybeish, so there is the possibility that warming of the oceans will cause the large ocean currents to slow/stop. This will reduce the amount of mixing of ocean water. Causing greater salinity and temperature gradients in the oceans relative to latitude. Making the Arctic ocean colder and the tropical ocean warmer. This colder Arctic ocean would lead to lower Arctic temperatures and an increase in ice, increasing the albedo of earth. The higher albedo would reflect more sunlight cooling the planet into an ice age.

      Having said all that it is important to note, first if this happens it will be on geologic time scales. So the planet will still get a lot hotter first. Second it is just a hypothesis, we don’t know what is going to happen on a longer scale because this period of warming is unprecedented in earth’s history. Yes it has been hotter and had higher CO2 levels, but not anywhere the speed of chance we have had in the last 100years. So using past trends to predict the current change will be vague at best.

      TLDR: it is still going to get a lot hotter before any chance of getting colder.

      • Tlaloc_Temporal
        link
        fedilink
        110 months ago

        Correct me if I’m wrong, but this warm ocean leading to cold poles is one of the suspected mechanisms that cause repeated glacial/interglacial periods in ice ages, right?

        • @Everythingispenguins
          link
          210 months ago

          That is my understanding, though I don’t know the details of the process off the top of my head.

    • @psud
      link
      1
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      We are in an ice age, you can tell because there is an ice cap at both poles.

      We are in an interglacial period, which if we fixed carbon pollution today would still continue for tens of thousands of years beyond it’s expected end

      There used to be a theory that this sort of weather reinforces the northern ice and glaciers and could start glaciation, but that’s not supported by modern models