Saturday, November 6, 2021

Heat engine is running in the West Pacific

 


I was really reluctant to declare this, but it's inevitable.  Of course, we need more physics on the Pacific heat engines, but since we are never going to get investigations, then we can just make up things.

The very narrow Pacific equatorial belt must punch over its weight, in the world scene.  Whenever anything goes on there, we get a big bump in world temperatures.  El Nino is the big dump of heat, but there have been lots of others, such as the Halvsie El Nino, and the little action in the east Pacific.  All of these put a bump on the temp charts.

A heat engine must gather and put out more heat energy than you would think for a small section of ocean.  How it does this is unclear, but you can always see a mess of little vortexes, and these must be the key.

This heat engine has been sending out big tropical plumes that are all over the North and putting it warm in the anomaly charts.  Yet, the ice is freezing faster than ever.  I think the warmth is more around the Arctic circle than the north pole.

This thing, whatever it is, probably can't last that long, and we'll continue our regular programming.  I'm just talking about cold weather, and nothing to do with climate.

ps.  the East Pacific looks like it wants to start up, but there is no heat energy.  Also, it is getting hit by a lot of cold water, so it is squelched.



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