[Silence]
[Instrumental, Guitar, Piano, Organ, Synth, Bass, Percussion, Drums]
[Intro]
[Instrumental Intro: Pulsing Bass, Organ Swell, Muted Guitar Chops, Rising Synth Filter]
[Minimal Beat, Sub Bass, Spoken Vocal]
[Verse 1]
The balance between
(In and out)
Heatin’ the scene
(There’s no doubt)
[Chorus]
Radiative forcing
(Humans coercing)
Radiative forcing
(Dunce’s endorsing)
[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Synth Solo]
Delta F
(Man’s gone deaf)
[Instrumental Guitar Solo, Organ Stabs, Driving Bass, Snare March]
[Instrumental, Saxophone Solo]
[Verse 2]
Oh, where to begin
(The balance within)
Our greenhouse
(Turning hothouse)
[Chorus]
Radiative forcing
(Humans coercing)
Radiative forcing
(Dunce’s endorsing)
[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Synth Solo]
Delta F
(Man’s gone deaf)
[Instrumental Guitar Solo, Organ Stabs, Driving Bass, Snare March]
[Outro]
The radiative force
(Oh, of course)
Turning up the heat
(Till we’re beat)
ABOUT THE SONG
Radiative Forcing
Radiative forcing (ΔF\Delta F) quantifies how much a GHG changes the balance between incoming and outgoing radiation:
Explanation:
-
ΔF\Delta F = radiative forcing (in watts per square meter, W/m²)
-
CC = current atmospheric CO₂ concentration (ppm)
-
C0C_0 = reference (pre-industrial) CO₂ concentration (ppm)
-
ln\ln = natural logarithm
Where:
-
CC = current CO₂ concentration (ppm)
-
C0C_0 = pre-industrial CO₂ concentration (~280 ppm)
-
The constant 5.35 comes from line-by-line radiative transfer calculations
This formula captures the logarithmic relationship: each doubling of CO₂ produces roughly the same increase in radiative forcing (~3.7 W/m² per doubling).
Other gases:
-
CH₄ (methane): short-lived but ~25× more potent than CO₂ over 100 years.
-
N₂O (nitrous oxide): ~298× more potent than CO₂ over 100 years.
The total forcing is the sum of all anthropogenic contributions:
Explanation:
-
ΔFtotal = total radiative forcing from all greenhouse gases
-
ΔFCO₂ = forcing due to carbon dioxide
-
ΔFCH₄ = forcing due to methane
-
ΔFN₂O = forcing due to nitrous oxide
-
“…” indicates contributions from other greenhouse gases (e.g., CFCs, HFCs)
From the album “Macroscopic Perspective“