This appears to be much like your post of June 10, both having so many acronyms it is hard to read.
As to assumptions, I'm only looking at your first one, which I *think* I understand. In reply, I don't think scientists are suggesting that without greenhouse gas emissions that the Earth would be "naked" and thus, like the Moon. Earth holds on to its much thicker atmosphere because of gravity and the magnetic field that shields the Earth from the solar wind. The Moon has no such protection from its thin atmosphere and weak magnetic field.
But perhaps I'm misunderstanding what you're writing. Please feel free to clarify. Thanks for considering my post.
Thank you for clarifying and providing the acronyms.
As to Earth orbiting at our current distance from the Sun -- which the Moon also does but lacks both a thick atmosphere and a strong magentosphere -- I refer you to this educational page about Earth's magentosphere, which protects Earth's atmosphere from most solar (and other cosmic forms of) radiation: https://scied.ucar.edu/learning-zone/sun-space-weather/earth-magnetosphere
The Moon is also not like the Earth because it lacks Earth's magnetosphere. I think it's a combination of atmosphere and magnetosphere that protects Earth from the Sun's energy.
We just went through a six-month process to put solar panels on our house. Now we're waiting for the utility (Duke Power) to turn them on.
Thanks for the information about the app. I'm going to give it a try.
This appears to be much like your post of June 10, both having so many acronyms it is hard to read.
As to assumptions, I'm only looking at your first one, which I *think* I understand. In reply, I don't think scientists are suggesting that without greenhouse gas emissions that the Earth would be "naked" and thus, like the Moon. Earth holds on to its much thicker atmosphere because of gravity and the magnetic field that shields the Earth from the solar wind. The Moon has no such protection from its thin atmosphere and weak magnetic field.
But perhaps I'm misunderstanding what you're writing. Please feel free to clarify. Thanks for considering my post.
Thank you for clarifying and providing the acronyms.
As to Earth orbiting at our current distance from the Sun -- which the Moon also does but lacks both a thick atmosphere and a strong magentosphere -- I refer you to this educational page about Earth's magentosphere, which protects Earth's atmosphere from most solar (and other cosmic forms of) radiation: https://scied.ucar.edu/learning-zone/sun-space-weather/earth-magnetosphere
The Moon is also not like the Earth because it lacks Earth's magnetosphere. I think it's a combination of atmosphere and magnetosphere that protects Earth from the Sun's energy.
Mars is thought to have once had a magnetosphere, but lost it... and along with it lost its atmosphere and oceans. Regarding Mars, I refer you to this explainer article with references: https://daily.jstor.org/how-mars-lost-its-magnetic-field-and-then-its-oceans/