On Sunday, July 18, 2021 at 10:58:22 PM UTC-7, James McGinn wrote:the molecular equivalent of steam (gaseous H2O). Actually, this is impossible. As confirmed by hundreds of years of experimental evidence, steam (gaseous H2O) can only exist above the boiling temperature/pressure of H2O. Obviously earth's atmosphere
There is a general misconception that the reduction is lift that aircraft experience in moist air is a result of moist air being lower in density than dry air. Supposedly this confirms the notion that the moisture in moist air is monomolecular H2O,
that it is generally true that denser air provides more lift than less dense air there appears to be a contradiction here. If all of this is true, why does heavier, denser, moist air not increase lift? Why does it reduce lift?Nevertheless, aircraft do experience reduced lift in moist air. And (due to the fact that moist air contains droplets of H2O that are larger than the N2 and O2 molecules that they replace) moist air is denser (heavier) than dry air. And so, given
atmosphere itself; And,Before we can answer that question there are two other truths about aerodynamics that we need to clarify:
1) The energy that causes lift in an airplane doesn't come from the engine of the airplane. The energy that comes from the engine of the airplane is used to overcome drag. The energy that causes lift comes from air pressure--it comes from the
But flying faster doesn't increase the amount of energy per volume that an airplane gets out of the air.2) there is a finite amount of energy per volume of air. And, therefore, there is a finite amount of energy that can be efficiently extracted from a volume of air. Flying faster allows you to use more air and, thereby, extract more energy from it.
much of it is soaked up by the liquid water that is in the air. So, stating that you know moist air is lighter because it reduces lift is, well, nonsense. It is an ignorance based assertion.The reason lift is reduced in moist air is because liquid H2O has a very high heat capacity, which is just a fancy way of saying that it absorbs energy. Specifically, it is harder to extract the finite amount of energy from a volume of air because so
lighter is an invalid argument. Because it fails to account for other factors that may actually be causing the reduction in lift. The fact is, as indicated, water's ability to absorb energy is greater than that of any other liquid. This is the reason whyThis falsehood has been promoted by the meteorological lobby. The truth is that moist air is heavier, not lighter, than dry air. And claiming that reduced drag associated with moist air is evidence that substantiates the notion that moist air is
think that that also indicates the weight/volume. And that simply ain't so. (Meteorologist look at things very differently than real scientist. They have their narrative that they hide from the public. They are more concerned about looking scientificThe best way to know the weight/volume of moist air is to measure it. Nobody ever has. Meteorologists absolutely refuse to measure it. Being ensconced in a paradigm dominated by group-think stupidity, meteorologists measure the relative humidity and
James McGinn / Solving Tornadoes
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