lee wrote on Nov 16
th, 2013 at 11:58am:
muso wrote on Nov 15
th, 2013 at 3:53pm:
I didn't go there, but I presume you mean water? Water is a follower - a feedback.
I don't get what you mean.
Do you mean water vapour is a lagging indicator of AGW, as is CO2?
BTW, I haven't found a study yet that has determined a tipping point at which CO2 flip-flops between lagging/leading indication.
That's because you read the wrong kind of blog. It's not a question of lagging or leading. It's an equilibrium.
If the temperature drops, water vapour drops out of the atmosphere. Really cold air is very dry. In other words, as the atmosphere heats up due to one forcing or another, more water vapour evaporates and ends up in the atmosphere. It's a feedback, whereas carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide and sulphur hexafluoride are all greenhouse gases that give rise to radiative forcing.
If you cool down the atmosphere, those gases stay in the atmosphere, whereas water vapour drops out.
The two major positive forcings are solar forcings and greenhouse gas forcings.
Do you understand how greenhouse gases work?
If you don't understand forcings and feedbacks , might I suggest that your attempts at self education in the subject are arse about. You should start with the basics.
These blogs that you read are engineered to confuse the gullible, the downright silly and the senile, but they often catch out others. I don't blame them. Real science makes their head hurt. Simple seductive lies are much easier on the grey matter.