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The Atmosphere Composition, Structure, & Heat Budget Atmospheric Composition • Reported on a dry basis, water vapor • • excluded since it’s so variable. Only 2 gases comprise 99% Water vapor normally <1 - 4% Minor gases exert influence far greater than their abundance would suggest, e.g. greenhouse effect, UV protection, photosynthesis, etc. Atmospheric Pressure • A measure of the mass per unit area of air. • Increases as the density of air increases because a volume of air with high density has more gas molecules than a volume with a lower density. • Decreases with altitude. Dynamic Equilibrium of Atmospheric Water Vapor • Atmospheric water vapor • • • varies immensely with place and time. For Earth as a whole, evaporation equals precipitation. For ocean as a whole, evaporation exceeds precipitation. Latent heat of vaporization supplies much of the heat to drive convection. Air Parcel Size and Temperature • Rising and cooling triggers condensation which forms clouds and rain. • Latent heat released at condensation further warms air and forces more rising. Layers of the Atmosphere • The inner most layer is the troposphere. It is mostly nitrogen and oxygen. Chemical cycling occurs in this layer. Responsible for the planet’s weather and climate. • The second layer is the stratosphere. Contains less matter than the troposphere. Ozone concentration is high, water concentration is very low. • The third layer is the mesosphere. This gives way to the thermosphere. • The exosphere is the last layer and it tails off into space and meets the solar wind. • The ionosphere straddles several layers. The ionosphere reflects radio waves & hosts the aurora borealis & aurora australis. TROPOSPHERE Structure & Temperature Profile of Lower Atmosphere • Virtually all weather occurs in troposphere. • Earth’s surface heats troposphere from bottom; favors vertical mixing. • Stratosphere heated most at middle & top because of UV ray absorption by ozone; limits vertical convective mixing there. strongest heating by UVabsorbing ozone heating from below Sun Angle Controls Sunlight Intensity • At low angles, sunlight spreads over much • larger areas & thus heats less effectively. At low angles, sunlight reflects from water & ice more efficiently. Variation of Solar Radiation with Latitude (also with Seasons and with Time of Day) At winter solstice (N.H.) the most intense radiation is at Tropic of Capricorn @ noon. noon radiation intensity (cal/cm2/min.) at given latitude on equinox days: @40o = 1.53 @66.5o = 0.80 @89.5o = 0.02 • • These numbers indicate global averages. Global Heat Budget Locally the energy fluxes vary with season, time of day, cloud cover, snow cover, vegetation patterns, etc. Greenhouse Effect = + X 5% X 16% Absorbed Visible Light Converted to IR, Sensible & Latent Heat X 39% Latitudinal Variations in Radiation Budget • Garrison, 2005 Excess heat lost near poles must be carried from tropics to poles by ocean currents & winds. Surplus must equal deficits to maintain heat budget. Poleward Heat Transport to Balance Unequal Heating • Equator • would be hotter & poles would be much colder without this transport. Transport by winds & ocean currents. Garrison, 2005