| Researchers Question Validity Of A 'Global Temperature' 
 Science  Daily — Discussions on global warming often refer to 'global  temperature.' Yet the concept is thermodynamically as well as  mathematically an impossibility, says Bjarne Andresen, a professor at  The Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, who has analyzed  this topic in collaboration with professors Christopher Essex from  University of Western Ontario and Ross McKitrick from University of  Guelph, Canada.
 
 It is generally assumed that the atmosphere and  the oceans have grown warmer during the recent 50 years. The reason for  this point of view is an upward trend in the curve of measurements of  the so-called 'global temperature'. This is the temperature obtained by  collecting measurements of air temperatures at a large number of  measuring stations around the Globe, weighing them according to the area  they represent, and then calculating the yearly average according to  the usual method of adding all values and dividing by the number of  points.
 
 Average without meaning
 
 "It is impossible to talk  about a single temperature for something as complicated as the climate  of Earth", Bjarne Andresen says, an an expert of thermodynamics. "A  temperature can be defined only for a homogeneous system. Furthermore,  the climate is not governed by a single temperature. Rather, differences  of temperatures drive the processes and create the storms, sea  currents, thunder, etc. which make up the climate".
 
 He explains  that while it is possible to treat temperature statistically locally, it  is meaningless to talk about a a global temperature for Earth. The  Globe consists of a huge number of components which one cannot just add  up and average. That would correspond to calculating the average phone  number in the phone book. That is meaningless. Or talking about  economics, it does make sense to compare the currency exchange rate of  two countries, whereas there is no point in talking about an average  'global exchange rate'.
 
 If temperature decreases at one point and  it increases at another, the average will remain the same as before,  but it will give rise to an entirely different thermodynamics and thus a  different climate. If, for example,  it is 10 degrees at one point and  40 degrees at another, the average is 25 degrees. But if instead there  is 25 degrees both places, the average is still 25 degrees. These two  cases would give rise to two entirely different types of climate,  because in the former case one would have pressure differences and  strong winds, while in the latter there would be no wind.
 
 Many averages
 
 A  further problem with the extensive use of 'the global temperature' is  that there are many ways of calculating average temperatures.
 
 Example  1: Take two equally large glasses of water. The water in one glass is 0  degrees, in the other it is 100 degrees. Adding these two numbers and  dividing by two yields an average temperature of 50 degrees. That is  called the arithmetic average.
 
 Example 2: Take the same two  glasses of water at 0 degrees and 100 degrees, respectively. Now  multiply those two numbers and take the square root, and you will arrive  at an average temperature of 46 degrees. This is called the geometric  average. (The calculation is done in degrees Kelvin which are then  converted back to degrees Celsius.)
 
 The difference of 4 degrees  is the energy which drives all the thermodynamic processes which create  storms, thunder, sea currents, etc.
 
 Claims of disaster?
 
 These  are but two examples of ways to calculate averages. They are all  equally correct, but one needs a solid physical reason to choose one  above another. Depending on the averaging method used, the same set of  measured data can simultaneously show an upward trend and a downward  trend in average temperature. Thus claims of disaster may be a  consequence of which averaging method has been used, the researchers  point out.
 
 What Bjarne Andresen and his coworkers emphasize is  that physical arguments are needed to decide whether one averaging  method or another is needed to calculate an average which is relevant to  describe the state of Earth.
 
 Reference: C. Essex, R. McKitrick,  B. Andresen: Does a Global Temperature Exist?; J. Non-Equil. Thermod.  vol. 32, p. 1-27 (2007).
 
 Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by University of Copenhagen.
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