theHawk
05-28-2008, 08:31 AM
How are the wackos going to explain this? Other planets are warming up naturally, but Earth's is most definately caused by man!
The latest images could provide evidence that Jupiter is in the midst of a global change that can modify temperatures by as much as 10 degrees Fahrenheit on different parts of the globe.
The study was led jointly by Imke de Pater and Philip Marcus of University of California, Berkeley.
"The storm is growing in altitude," de Pater said. "Before when they were just ovals they didn't stick out above the clouds. Now they are rising."
This growth signals a temperature increase in that region, she said.
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/space/2006-05-04-jupiter-jr-spot_x.htm
Residual ice on the Martian south pole, they note, has steadily retreated over the last four years.
By comparison, the average temperature of Earth increased by 0.75 C (1.33 F) over the last century.
To measure the change in patterns of reflected light, Fenton and her colleagues compared thermal spectrometer images of Mars taken by NASA's Viking mission in the late 1970s with similar images gathered more than 20 years later by the Global Surveyor.
They then analyzing the correlation between albedo variations, the presence of atmospheric dust and change in temperature.
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=070404203258.5klhwqs4&show_article=1
The latest images could provide evidence that Jupiter is in the midst of a global change that can modify temperatures by as much as 10 degrees Fahrenheit on different parts of the globe.
The study was led jointly by Imke de Pater and Philip Marcus of University of California, Berkeley.
"The storm is growing in altitude," de Pater said. "Before when they were just ovals they didn't stick out above the clouds. Now they are rising."
This growth signals a temperature increase in that region, she said.
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/space/2006-05-04-jupiter-jr-spot_x.htm
Residual ice on the Martian south pole, they note, has steadily retreated over the last four years.
By comparison, the average temperature of Earth increased by 0.75 C (1.33 F) over the last century.
To measure the change in patterns of reflected light, Fenton and her colleagues compared thermal spectrometer images of Mars taken by NASA's Viking mission in the late 1970s with similar images gathered more than 20 years later by the Global Surveyor.
They then analyzing the correlation between albedo variations, the presence of atmospheric dust and change in temperature.
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=070404203258.5klhwqs4&show_article=1