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1 Climate Change: Impacts and Responses Topic 2: The Earth's Climate System 2 Topic outline Image: NASA Earth Observatory 1. Definitions 2. Components of Earth’s climate system 3. Drivers of Earth’s climate system (internal and external forcings and feedback mechanisms) 4. Earth's energy balance and the greenhouse effect 5. Biogeochemical cycles and links to the climate system 3 Learning outcomes for this topic Demonstrate an understanding of the main components of the Earth’s climate system and how they interact Demonstrate an understanding of what drives the Earth’s climate system Describe the Earth’s energy balance and how it relates to the greenhouse effect Demonstrate an understanding of how biogeochemical cycles influence Earth’s climate Image Credit: Fred Kulpers 4 Section 1: Definitions 5 Outline: Definitions Earth’s climate system Radiative forcing Climate feedbacks 6 Earth’s climate system The climate system is defined by the dynamics and interactions of its five major components: Atmosphere (air) Hydrosphere (liquid water) Cryosphere (frozen water) Geosphere (land surface) Biosphere (life) Climate system dynamics are driven by both internal and external radiative forcings. 7 Radiative forcing Radiative forcing relates to the amount of energy which Earth receives from the sun, and how much Earth then radiates back into space. Types of radiative forcing: • external forcings are those attributable to changes in the amount of energy that arrives at Earth in the first place, • internal forcings are all those factors that determine how much energy is reflected or radiated by Earth. What can affect radiative forcing? • changes to the amount of incoming radiation • changes to the amount of solar radiation that is reflected away from the Earth, or • changes in the amount of energy that is radiated away from Earth. 8 Climate feedbacks Feedbacks occur when an internal or external forcing results in changes to the climate system which further impact climate system dynamics in a feedback loop. A positive feedback operates to increasingly impact climate. A negative feedback is self-limiting, and offsets or reduces the prevailing change. Fig FAQ8.1-1 (Chapter 8, IPCC AR5, 2013) An example of a positive climate feedback is atmospheric water vapour. 9 Section 2: Components of the Earth's climate system Outline: 10 Components of the Earth’s climate system Components Interactions amongst components 11 Components of Earth’s climate system 12 Read more: The atmosphere The atmosphere is mostly nitrogen (78.1%) and oxygen (20.9%), with trace gases including argon and helium, as well as radiatively active greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide (0.035%) and ozone. The atmosphere is made up of layers called the troposphere, stratosphere, mesosphere and thermosphere, each with varying temperatures and with different properties in terms of the gases they contain. Image: www.noaa.gov 13 Schematic view of components of the climate system and its interactions Image: IPCC 2007 14 Section 3: Drivers of the Earth’s climate system Outline: 15 Drivers of the Earth’s climate system Drivers of climate change External climate forcings Internal climate forcings Feedbacks 16 Drivers of climate change IPCC 2014 17 Climate forcings External Forcings: Solar variation Milankovitch cycles Internal Forcings: Greenhouse gases Tropospheric aerosols Stratospheric ozone Land surface changes Ocean circulation changes Volcanoes 18 Solar variation Periodic and aperiodic fluctuations Solar variation and volcanic activity account for some climate change within prehistory Solar variations alone do not explain the currently observed changes. Image created by Robert A. Rohde / Global Warming Art 19 Milankovitch cycles Schematic of the Earth’s orbital changes (Milankovitch cycles) that drive the ice age cycles. ‘T’ denotes changes in the tilt (or obliquity) of the Earth’s axis, ‘E’ denotes changes in the eccentricity of the orbit (due to variations in the minor axis of the ellipse), and ‘P’ denotes precession, that is, changes in the direction of the axis tilt at a given point of the orbit. Source: Rahmstorf and Schellnhuber (2006).(IPCC 2007) Image: Robert A. Rhodes, Global Warming Art Eccentricity (a cycle of around 100,000 years) Tilt or Obliquity (a cycle of around 41,000 years) Precession (a cycle of around 24,000 years) 20 Greenhouse gases Greenhouse gases absorb and emit radiation within the thermal infrared range Greenhouse gases include: water vapour, carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, ozone, CFCs …and others Image: www.climate.nasa.gov 21 Tropospheric aerosols Aerosols: Scatter and absorb radiation, bringing about complex interactions with climate Play a role in cloud formation Create positive and negative forcing: • Sulphate aerosols persist over time and reflect energy from the sun resulting in cooling • Black carbon particles settle on Earth and reduce albedo which causes warming Image: www.nasa.gov 22 Stratospheric ozone The ozone layer is thinning due to effects of chlorine and bromine released from manmade CFCs Holes have formed over the poles as a result of the effects of seasonal stratospheric cloud formation Stratospheric ozone has complex direct and indirect interactions with climate Image: www.nasa.gov Image of the largest Antarctic ozone hole ever recorded (September 2006), over the Southern pole 23 Ocean circulation changes Image: NOAA 24 Land surface changes Image: www.nasa.gov 25 Volcanos Image: NASA A volcano is a rupture in the Earth’s crust from which magma, ash and gases can escape. They have far-reaching atmospheric effects. 26 Estimates of radiative forcing in 2011 relative to 1750 Fig SPM.5, IPCC AR5, 2013 27 Positive and negative feedback mechanisms IPCC 2014 28 Our understanding of these feedbacks Well-understood: Water vapour (positive feedback) Albedo (positive feedback) Less-well understood: Land carbon cycle (currently negative feedback) Clouds (positive and negative feedback) Feedbacks not included in climate models: Methane hydrates (positive feedbacks) Permafrost methane (positive feedback) 29 Section 4: Earth’s energy balance and the greenhouse effect 30 Outline: Earth’s energy balance and the greenhouse effect What is the greenhouse effect? Earth’s energy balance 31 What is the greenhouse effect? Image: www.nps.gov 32 Earth’s energy budget Global annual energy flows are shown in Watts/m2 TOA stands for Top of Atmosphere Image: IPCC 2013 33 Section 5: Biogeochemical cycles and links to the climate system Outline: 34 Biogeochemical cycles and links to the climate system What are biogeochemical cycles? The carbon cycle The nitrogen cycle 35 What are biogeochemical cycles? Transfer and transport of matter within the biosphere, hydrosphere, geosphere and atmosphere Gaseous cycles (carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, water) Sedimentary cycles (phosphorus, sulphur) 36 The carbon cycle Fig FAQ6.2-1, Chapter 6, IPCC AR5, 2013 37 Read more: The carbon cycle Fig 6.1, Chapter 6, IPCC AR5, 2013 38 The nitrogen cycle Nitrogen is the most important element for plant growth Nitrogen availability affects the rate of key eco-system processes Human activities - fossil fuel combustion, the use of inorganic nitrogen fertilizers, and release of nitrogen in wastewater have altered the global Nitrogen cycle Fig Box6.2, Chapter 6, IPCC AR5, 2013 Box 6.2, Figure 1 | Anthropogenic reactive nitrogen (Nr) creation rates (in TgN yr–1) from fossil fuel burning (orange line), cultivationinduced biological nitrogen fixation (blue line), Haber–Bosch process (green line) and total creation (red line). Source: Galloway et al. (2003), Galloway et al. (2008). 39 Read more: The nitrogen cascade Fig Box 6.2-2; Chapter 6, IPCC AR5 2013 40 Summary Components of the climate system Radiative forcing • • External forcings Internal forcings Climate feedbacks The greenhouse effect Earth’s energy budget Biogeochemical cycles 41 References IPCC Fourth Assessment Report: Climate Change 2007 (AR4) available at www.ipcc.ch IPCC Fifth Assessment Report: Climate Change 2013 and 2014 (AR5) available at www.ipcc.ch Jansen, E., J. Overpeck, K.R. Briffa, J.-C. Duplessy, F. Joos, V. Masson-Delmotte, D. Olago, B. OttoBliesner, W.R. Peltier, S. Rahmstorf, R. Ramesh, D. Raynaud, D. Rind, O. Solomina, R. Villalba and D. Zhang, 2007: Palaeoclimate. In: Climate Change (2007). The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change [Solomon, S., D. Qin, M. Manning, Z. Chen, M. Marquis, K.B. Averyt, M. Tignor and H.L. Miller (eds.)]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA. Rahmstorf, S., and H.J. Schellnhuber, (2006). Der Klimawandel. Beck Verlag, Munich, 144 pp Galloway, J. N., J. D. Aber, J. W. Erisman, S. P. Seitzinger, R. W. Howarth, E. B. Cowling, and B. J. Cosby, )2003). The nitrogen cascade. BioScience, 53, 341–356. Galloway, J. N., et al., (2008). Transformation of the nitrogen cycle: Recent trends, questions, and potential solutions. Science, 320, 889. 42 End of Topic 2: The Earth’s Climate System Next Topic: Climate Change in the Distant Past