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The Greenhouse Effect by Poterovsky.
The greenhouse effect, also known as the "flower house effect". Solar radiation irradiates the ground through the atmosphere, and the long-wave thermal radiation emitted from the surface is absorbed by the atmosphere, causing the temperature to continue to rise.
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Haha, I wanted to ask this question too. Just look at the answer together.
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Butterfly effect.
What is the Butterfly Effect? In December 1979, Lorenz gave a lecture at the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Washington, D.C., suggesting that a butterfly flapping its wings in Brazil could cause a tornado in Texas, USA.
His speech and conclusions made an extremely strong impression. Since then, the so-called "butterfly effect" has spread far and wide.
The "butterfly effect" is fascinating, exciting, and thought-provoking not only because of its bold imagination and fascinating aesthetic color, but also because of its profound scientific connotation and inherent philosophical charm.
From a scientific point of view, the "butterfly effect" reflects an important feature of chaotic motion: the sensitive dependence of the system's long-term behavior on the initial conditions.
The traditional view of classical dynamics is that the long-term behavior of the system is insensitive to the initial conditions, that is, the difference between the small changes in the initial conditions and the future state is also very small. Chaos theory challenges conventional wisdom.
Chaos theory holds that in a chaotic system, very small changes in the initial conditions are amplified and can make a huge difference in their future state. We can illustrate this with a ballad that circulates in the West. The ballad says:
Lost a nail, broke a shoe;
broke a farrier and broke a warhorse;
broke a war horse and wounded a knight;
wounded a knight and lost a battle;
Lost a battle, lost an empire.
Whether a nail on a horseshoe is lost or not is a very small change in the initial conditions, but its "long-term" effect is the fundamental difference between the survival and the death of an empire. This is the so-called "butterfly effect" in the military and political spheres, which sounds a bit incredible, but it can do so. Some seemingly small things may cause the fall apart within the collective, and we must prevent it from getting worse, otherwise, it will be too late to regret it.
The "Butterfly Effect" Apocalypse, How Much Do You Know Through the Ages?
The frog effect. Once upon a time there was a fable about boiled frogs: if you put a frog in boiling water, it will come out; If you put a frog in warm water, it will feel comfortable. Then you slowly heat up again, even if it rises to 80 angstroms Celsius.
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The retinal effect when you have something, you will find that many other people have it, the herd effect, where the leader goes, where the masses go.
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Butterfly Effect: Refers to very small things that can cause noticeable effects.
The "herd effect" refers to a common phenomenon in the market behavior of some enterprises in management. For example, a flock (collective) is a very scattered organization, and usually everyone is blindly rushing left and right together. If a sheep finds a fertile green meadow and eats fresh grass there, the flock will rush up and compete for it, ignoring the wolves watching it next to it, or seeing no other grass that is better.
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Greenhouse Effect A phenomenon of rising global temperatures caused by carbon dioxide.
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Broken Window Effect: If someone breaks the window glass of a building, and that window doesn't get the "butterfly effect" apocalypse in time, how much do you know about it? The Frog Effect Once upon a time there was a fable about boiled frogs.
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Time and space matter are all created by the solar system, and there is no time and space matter outside the solar system, and no matter can escape from the solar system.