There was an almost infinite amount of mathturbation about this including the original paper, and Dr. Makarieva was very, well, insistent.
Eli OTOH is a member of the reality based community. The Rabett likes to look at what is going on and figure out what it means before turning the math crank. Recently Ms Rabett dragged Eli off into the mountains where he could actually watch the clouds form. He could tell you what happened, but in this world we have the video.
There are lots more of these on You Tube and in all of them when the cloud forms it expands, the condensed water vapor provides an excellent tracer of the process,
So who should the bunnies trust.
Damn these lying eyes of mine.
ReplyDeleteThe video appears to show cloud formation in something resembling a constant gradient, with the general wind direction moving from the right of the screen to the left, while the condensation front moves to the right, opposite the prevailing wind direction.
ReplyDeleteWhile the cloud appears to expand against the prevailing wind, the moving condensation front doesn't appear to be expanding due to outward expansion (i.e., it didn't "blow the air outwards") or a reversal of the prevailing wind. I'm not a meteorologist, but this doesn't appear to provide a convincing case against (or for) Makarieva, if the release of heat from condensation isn't enough to observe changes in wind patterns superimposed on the prevailing gradient.
OTOH, if there wasn't a strong prevailing gradient on top of which the cloud formation was observed, it might provide a better example to judge. I could very well be missing something here, as I'm sure someone will let me know. I'm not defending Makarieva, as I think strong claims require strong evidence; I'm just not sure this example works.
Taylor B
For a clear example look at 0.27 sec in the center of the screen underneath the large cloud mass as a smaller cloud forms detached from the larger one. In almost all cases the newly formed clouds grow and expand (there are a couple which do disappear). That is the point, not the winds. Makarieva, et al would tell you that when a cloud forms (condensation) it pulls the air mass inward.
ReplyDeleteSome information relevant to you query can be found here. In brief, when we see a cloud increasing in size, this does not mean that the air is expanding. It is the area of convergence (shrinking) that is growing.
ReplyDeleteIf you go into a region with strong updrafts you can actually see the water aerosol form and expand as it does. Water vapor is not mysteriously sucked into the cloud.
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