NewTube

NewTube

Sign In

-30  

-15  

-5  

-1  

+1  

+5  

+15  

+30  




Tony HellerPLUS

1718

268

Hot Summer Nights

  - 5:04

On July 25, 1936 temperatures at Lincoln, Nebraska never dropped below 91F. University of Nebraska students slept on the lawn because the dormitories were unbearably hot.


0

0

0

0

2

Share on TwitterShare on Twitter


535 Views

Uploaded 2 years ago  

August 31st 2022  

File Size: 51 MB

Category: Politics







5 Comments

Shoah_Kahn

- 2 years ago  

CNN editor caught on hidden camera admitting that the next "pandemic" hoax the network will promulgate, will be "climate change" -- and over a much longer term than the so-called "CoVID-19 pandemic": https://i.imgur.com/lHoJJ1h.jpg

YorkieBoy

- 2 years ago  

There is no additional energy associated with humid nights. It is like insulation, it just slows down the rate of heat loss. It does not increase the temperature. It will keep the temperature higher for longer but eventually the heat escapes. Energy matter not temperatures.

Shoah_Kahn

- 2 years ago  

The insulating effect of humidity will slow down the heat loss to space, and enough that it will the effect of 'increasing' night time temperatures dramatically (in human / Goldilocks terms). Therefore, the water vapour in the air, from the cornfields, would contribute to higher night time temperatures in regions where cornfields predominate. Also, only LATENT HEAT is separate from temperature change (see: the laws of thermodynamics). Otherwise, as heat is exchanged (from the Sun to Earth / Earth to space), measured temperatures will change accordingly.

sailingspt

- 2 years ago  

This is excellent analysis. I greatly appreciate your work. Karl Popper would be proud of you as well.

Elvisboy777

- 2 years ago  

Thanks