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OverviewMany books have been published about stopping global warming. What sets this book apart is that it applies the science of process control to analyze the warming process. To control a process, we must fully understand it. Global warming is analyzed here as a heat balance process in which Earth is warmed by the Sun and cooled by outer space. For a million years these heat flows were in balance, but burning fossil fuels has upset the radiative equilibrium as combustion products accumulated in the atmosphere. The process-control-based analysis shows that Earth's heating should be reduced and its cooling increased, yet the opposite is occurring: Earth's temperature is rising faster than ever before, and the greenhouse effect that blocks some of Earth’s radiation from escaping into outer space is larger than any time in centuries. The analysis also shows that global warming will accelerate when the tipping points of the gigantic feedback loops (ocean degassing, ice cover melting, permafrost methane release, clouding increase, etc.) are triggered. Using the well-established process control principles, Lipták evaluates the time constants and inertias and determines the dynamic characteristics of the global warming process, identifies the subprocesses that sustain or escalate warming, and ultimately determines not only what needs to be done, but also describes the technology and infrastructure needed to do it. While the book describes the consequences of this out-of-control global warming process, it also describes the role artificial intelligence can play in stopping it. In addition, the book provides the timeframe—based on the actual gains and inertias of this process—for converting today's energy economy into a safe, free, and inexhaustible one by 2050. Today mankind is at a crossroad! One sign at this fork reads ""Trust Science."" This sign shows the direction towards protecting the only home we have and caring about the future of our children. We must shake off complacency, stop living in delusion, and do what needs to be done to protect the planet. The other sign reads ""It's a Hoax!"" We must not find out where this second road leads, because the threat is the size of life itself. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Béla Lipták (Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary; Stevens Institute of Technology, NJ; City College of New York, NY; Pratt Institute, NY)Publisher: Instrument Society of America Imprint: Instrument Society of America ISBN: 9781643311425ISBN 10: 1643311425 Pages: 532 Publication Date: 20 April 2026 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationBéla Lipták was born in 1936 in Hungary. As a Technical University student, he participated in the revolution against the Soviet occupation. He escaped and entered the United States as a refugee in 1956. In 1959, he received an engineering degree from Stevens Institute of Technology; he received a master's degree from the City College of New York in 1962; and later, he did graduate work at Pratt Institute. In 1960, he became the chief instrument engineer at Crawford and Russell, where he led the automation of dozens of industrial plants for more than a decade. In 1969, he published the multivolume Instrument and Automation Engineers' Handbook, which is currently in its fifth edition. In 1975, he received his professional engineering license and founded a consulting firm named Béla Lipták Associates PC, which provides design and consulting services in the fields of energy-related automation and industrial safety. Over the years, he lectured at many universities around the world, including Yale University, where he was an adjunct professor in 1987. Béla Lipták published more than 300 technical articles on climate change, global warming, and the automation of the new infrastructure they require (www.controlglobal.com/voices/liptak.html), as well as more than 20 books on various aspects of automation, safety, and energy technology. In 1973, he was elected a Fellow of the International Society of Automation (ISA); in 1995, he received ISA's Technical Achievement Award; and in 2001, he was inducted into Control magazine's Process Automation Hall of Fame. He was also the keynote speaker at many domestic and overseas conventions. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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