Can regions of space influence temperature on earth
Could there be regions in space that impact temperatures, or climate, on earth as we travel through? We've been measuring for some time, but earth is constantly moving through regions in space that we may not see again for a time longer than what we've been measuring for.
We've been measuring temperatures around earth for a relatively short space of time. There are various ways of inferring temperatures at times before we started regularly measuring and recording, but I don't know how accurate and consistent those methods are, but I should probably familiarise myself with the subject.
What I've been wondering about, and this stems from something else I wonder about, earth revolves around the sun, the sun revolves around something, which also revolves around something else.
This means that it takes a lot of time for our little rock to pass through various regions of space. A much longer time that what we've been measuring and recording for. So is it then possible, that each of these regions of space could have varying temperatures, which would naturally affect the climate on our planet?
I'm not denying climate change here, but I am wondering how much of it our activity impacts vs the things we don't yet measure.
Leave a Comment