PeterDonis
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spareine said:any initial temperature gradient will be stable if it is equal to or less than the dry lapse rate
Stable against convection, yes. Not stable against conduction. Conductive heat transfer will occur if there is any temperature gradient at all.
It is true that, because the thermal conductivity of air is very low, conduction is a very slow process, so if you take a vertical tube of gas and start it off with a temperature gradient less than the dry lapse rate, it will take a long time, compared to convective time scales, for the temperature in the tube to equilibrate. But it will equilibrate; the time for the thermal gradient to be equalized is not infinite.