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ATM S 211 – Climate and Climate Change HOMEWORK 4: Ancient atmospheres and climate. (DUE MONDAY MARCH 1) Qu. 1) (a) Explain where Earth’s atmosphere and ocean came from (in no more than 2 to 4 sentences)? [6 pts] (b) Which gases are thought to have made up the Hadean atmosphere, after the Earth’s core had formed? [6 pts] Qu. 2) The age of the Solar System (and hence the Earth) can be determined from the decay of radioisotopes within meteorites. The technique involves looking at how many stable “daughter” atoms have been produced from the decay of a radioactive “parent” atom. An example of a parent is 87Rb (a radioisotope of rubidium), which radioactively decays to the daughter atom, 87Sr (a stable isotope of strontium). The following graph shows some values from three meteorite samples. The following equation is used to calculate the age of the samples and hence the age of the Solar System: 87 Sr 87 Sr t 87 Rb = 86 + 86 86 Sr TODAY Sr START τ Sr TODAY 87 Sr is just the intercept on the vertical axis (close to 0.7), which The quantity 86 Sr START corresponds to the ratio of strontium isotopes that were originally present in the meteorites when the Solar System formed. The number of 86Sr atoms has remained the same in the sample (because 86Sr is a stable isotope), but the number of 87Sr atoms has 87 Sr accumulated from the decay of radioactive 87Rb. The quantities 86 and Sr TODAY 1 ATM S 211 – Climate and Climate Change 87 Rb are the values on the y (vertical) and x (horizontal) axes, respectively, for 86 Sr TODAY each data point. The slope of a line connecting the values for the three samples is equivalent to t/τ, where t is the total time that has elapsed since the meteorites were formed. The slope is found to be 0.06449. The quantity τ is given by τ = T/0.693 where T is the half-life of 87Rb. (a) What are isotopes? [2 pts] (b) What is meant by the term “half-life”? [2 pts] (c) Use the above equation, and the values given, to calculate the age of the Solar System. (You will also need the half-life, T, of 87Rb, which is 49 billion years). [4 pts] (d) In another planetary system around another star, intelligent extraterrestrials living on one of the planets find that the slope of the same graph using data from meteorites within their planetary system is larger. Is their “solar system” older or younger than ours? Provide a brief explanation. [3 pts] Qu. 3) Former Vice-President of the U.S.A., Dan Quayle, said, “Mars is essentially in the same orbit. Mars is somewhat the same distance from the Sun, which is very important. We have seen pictures where there are canals, we believe, and water. If there is water that means there is oxygen. If there is oxygen, then we can breathe.” (August, 1989) Describe three technical mistakes in the above. (You will not receive credit for saying that it was a mistake to have someone with Dan Quayle’s intellect as Vice-President). [3 pts] Qu. 4) How do carbon isotopes in sedimentary carbonate rocks tell us about rates of production of atmospheric O2? (If stuck, see Chapter 11 of the textbook). [5 pts] Qu. 5) Why is the planet Mars red? The simplistic answer is because Mars has redcolored iron oxides on its surface. The deeper answer is that Mars has lost hydrogen atoms and molecular hydrogen to space. Explain how losing hydrogen to space would have turned Mars red. [5 pts] Qu. 6) Why is methane thought to have been an important greenhouse gas in the Earth’s atmosphere during the Archean Eon? [3 pts] 2 ATM S 211 – Climate and Climate Change Qu. 7) In the Milankovitch theory of ice ages, changes of Earth’s orbital parameters (such as eccentricity, obliquity, and precession of perihelion) cause snow and ice to extend much farther from the polar regions than they do today. What orbital configuration favors glaciation? Why? (If stuck, check Chapter 14 of the textbook). [6 pts] Qu. 8) The orbit of the Earth is not a circle but an ellipse. An ellipse is defined as the locus of all points such that the sum of the distances to two fixed points, called the foci, is a constant. We can easily show that this constant is equal to 2a, where a is called the semimajor axis of the ellipse. (See Box Figure 14-1 of the textbook (reproduced below) and accompanying discussion in Box 14-1.) The eccentricity e of the ellipse is defined such that the distance from one focus to the midpoint of the figure is ae. An ellipse with e = 0 is a circle, i.e., the Sun would be at the center of a circular orbit. Box Figure 14-1 from textbook (a) Kepler’s first law (see Box 14-1) states that the planets move around the Sun in elliptical orbits with the Sun at one focus. Earth’s present orbit has a semimajor axis of 1 AU (Astronomical Unit) and an eccentricity of 0.017. The point of closest approach to the Sun is the perihelion; the point farthest away is the aphelion. By considering Box Fig 14-1, how much closer is Earth to the Sun at perihelion than at aphelion? Express your answer in astronomical units. [4 pts] (b) The Milankovitch theory of the ice ages holds that the most important forcing factor is the difference in solar heating at high latitudes when Northern Hemisphere summer occurs at perihelion as opposed to aphelion. Using the inverse square law (Chapter 3), find the solar flux at perihelion and at aphelion. Recall that the solar flux at 1 AU is 1370 W/m2. How much higher is the solar flux at perihelion than at aphelion today? Express 3 ATM S 211 – Climate and Climate Change your answer as a percentage. How much warmer is the effective radiating temperature of Earth (Chapter 3)? [9 pts] (c) The eccentricity of Earth’s orbit varies with time as a consequence of gravitational perturbations caused by the other planets. Repeat part (b) for e at its maximum value of 0.06. [6 pts] 4