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Climate Change: The Move to Action (AOSS 480 // NRE 480) Richard B. Rood Cell: 301-526-8572 2525 Space Research Building (North Campus) [email protected] http://aoss.engin.umich.edu/people/rbrood Winter 2014 February 11, 2014 Class News • Ctools site: AOSS_SNRE_480_001_W14 • Reading: The World Four Degrees Warmer – New et al. 2011 • Something I am playing with – http://openclimate.tumblr.com/ Politics of Dismissal Entry Model Uncertainty Description First Reading Response • The World Four Degrees Warmer – New et al. 2011 • Reading responses of roughly one page (single-spaced). The responses do not need to be elaborate, but they should also not simply summarize the reading. They should be used by you to refine your questions and to improve your insight into climate change. • They should be submitted via CTools by next Tuesday and we will use them to guide discussion in class on Thursday. Assignment posted with some questions to guide responses. Projects • • • • • Fracking – Emissions – Bridging fuel in U.S. – Pipeline and climate change Agricultural – Emissions associated with meat production – Local, organic, sustainable – No till, water, temperature, Low-cost / Low-impact technology – Stoves in India / Short-term management strategies Abrupt Climate Change – Placing this into context Midwest Warming Hole – Regional changes impact decision making Today • Scientific investigation of the Earth’s climate: Foundational information – Aerosols – Feedbacks The Earth System SUN CLOUD-WORLD ATMOSPHERE ICE (cryosphere) OCEAN LAND Following Energy through the Atmosphere • We have been concerned about, almost exclusively, greenhouse gases. – Need to introduce aerosols • Continuing to think about – Things that absorb – Things that reflect Aerosols • Aerosols are particulate matter in the atmosphere. – They impact the radiative budget. – They impact cloud formation and growth. Aerosols: Particles in the Atmosphere Aerosols: Particles in the atmosphere. • Water droplets – (CLOUDS) • “Pure” water • Sulfuric acid • Nitric acid • Smog •… • Ice • Dust AEROSOLS CAN: • Soot REFLECT RADIATION • Salt ABSORB RADIATION • Organic hazes CHANGE CLOUD DROPLETS Earth’s aerosols Dust and fires in Mediterranean Forest Fires in US The Earth System Aerosols (and clouds) Clouds are difficult to predict or to figure out the sign of their impact Top of Atmosphere / Edge of Space • Warmer more water more clouds • More clouds mean more reflection of solar cooler • More clouds mean more infrared to surface warmer • More or less clouds? • Does this stabilize? • Water in all three phases essential to “stable” climate CLOUD ATMOSPHERE (infrared) SURFACE The Earth System: Aerosols Top of Atmosphere / Edge of Space Aerosols directly impact radiative balance • Aerosols can mean more reflection of solar cooler • Aerosols can absorb more solar radiation in the atmosphere heat the atmosphere • In very polluted air they almost act like a “second” surface. They warm the atmosphere, cool the earth’s surface. AEROSOLS ATMOSPHERE ? (infrared) SURFACE Composition of aerosols matters. •This figure is simplified. •Infrared effects are not well quantified South Asia “Brown Cloud” • But don’t forget – Europe and the US in the 1950s and 1960s • Change from coal to oil economy Asian Brown Cloud (But don’t forget history.) • Coal emits sulfur and smoke particulates • “Great London smog” of 1952 led to thousands of casualties. – Caused by cold inversion layer pollutants didn’t disperse + Londoners burned large amounts of coal for heating • Demonstrated impact of pollutants and played role in passage of “Clean Air Acts” in the US and Western Europe Current Anthropogenic Aerosol Extreme • South Asian Brown Cloud Aerosol: South & East Asia http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NasaNews/2001/200108135050.html Reflection of Radiation due to Aerosol http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NasaNews/2001/200108135050.html Atmospheric Warming: South & East Asia WARMING IN ATMOSPHERE, DUE TO SOOT (BLACK CARBON) http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NasaNews/2001/200108135050.html Surface Cooling Under the Aerosol http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NasaNews/2001/200108135050.html Natural Aerosol Earth’s aerosols Volcanoes and Climate • Alan Robock: Volcanoes and Climate Change (36 MB!) Alan Robock Department of Environmental Sciences More Reflected Solar Flux Stratospheric aerosols (Lifetime 1-3 years) Less Upward IR Flux backscatter absorption (near IR) H2S H SO 2 4 SO2 CO2 H2O Solar Heating IR Heating Heterogeneous Less O3 depletion Solar Heating emission IR Cooling absorption (IR) emission forward scatter Ash Reduced Direct Flux Enhanced Diffuse Flux Tropospheric aerosols (Lifetime 1-3 weeks) SO2 H2SO4 Indirect Effects on Clouds Alan Robock Department of Environmental Sciences Effects on cirrus clouds Less Total Solar Flux More Downward IR Flux Superposed epoch analysis of six largest eruptions of past 120 years Significant cooling follows sun for two years Robock and Mao (1995) Year of eruption Alan Robock Department of Environmental Sciences The Earth System Aerosols (and clouds) Aerosols impact clouds and hence indirectly impact radiative budget through clouds Top of Atmosphere / Edge of Space • Change their height • Change their reflectivity • Change their ability to rain • Change the size of the droplets CLOUD ATMOSPHERE (infrared) SURFACE Aerosols and Clouds and Rain Some important things to know about aerosols • They can directly impact radiative budget through both reflection and absorption. • They can indirectly impact radiative budget through their effects on clouds both reflection and absorption. • They have many different compositions, and the composition matters to what they do. • They have many different, often episodic sources. • They generally fall out or rainout of the atmosphere; they don’t stay there very long compared with greenhouse gases. • They often have large regional effects. • They are an indicator of dirty air, which brings its own set of problems. • They are often at the core of discussions of geo-engineering Today • Scientific investigation of the Earth’s climate: Foundational information – Aerosols – Feedbacks More consideration of radiative energy in the atmosphere • FEEDBACKS .... – The idea that one thing causes a second thing to happen. • That second thing then does something to the first thing – It damps it, negative feedback – It amplifies it, positive feedback – Technical Reference: Soden and Held We perturb the system – how does it respond? • What happens when we perturb the system? Is it stable or unstable? • Feedbacks – are they positive or negative? The Earth System: Feedbacks 1 Infrared Proportional to Temperature Top of Atmosphere / Edge of Space Assume that greenhouse gases remain the same • Infrared emission is proportional to temperature • Temperature increases emission increases T H T 0 t H T ATMOSPHERE (infrared) SURFACE The Earth System: Feedbacks 2 Water Vapor When it gets warmer more water, a greenhouse gas, will be in the atmosphere Top of Atmosphere / Edge of Space • Higher temperature increases evaporation from land and ocean • Higher temperature allows air to hold more water • Increase of water increases thickness of blanket – increases temperature more • This could runaway! • Natural limit because of condensation clouds, rain? • Compensating circulation changes? • Think deserts … ATMOSPHERE (infrared) SURFACE The Earth System: Feedbacks 3 Ice - Albedo When it gets warmer less ice Top of Atmosphere / Edge of Space • Less ice means less reflection warmer • Warmer means less ice • This could runaway! • Cooler works the other way ice-covered ICE The Earth System: Feedbacks 4 Clouds? Clouds are difficult to predict or to figure out the sign of their impact Top of Atmosphere / Edge of Space • Warmer more water more clouds • More clouds mean more reflection of solar cooler • More clouds mean more infrared to surface warmer • More or less clouds? • Does this stabilize? • Water in all three phases essential to stable climate CLOUD ATMOSPHERE (infrared) SURFACE The Earth System: Feedbacks 5 Something with the Ocean? Is there something with the ocean and ice? • Land ice melting decreases ocean salinity (density) • Sea-ice impacts heat exchange between ocean and atmosphere • Sea-ice impacts solar absorption of ocean • North Atlantic sea-ice and ocean interaction very important to the climate • Think Gulf Stream • Think climate and people and economy • Is there a natural feedback that stabilizes climate? • Even if there is, it would be very disruptive, perhaps not stable from a societal point of view. Cloud-Ice-Atmosphere Feedback • Some carry away messages – This is where much of the discussion about scientific uncertainty resides. – The Earth is at a complex balance point • That balance relies on water to exist in all three phases. – Too warm could run away to “greenhouse” – Too cold run away to “snowball” ice vapor – How clouds change is not much argued. • The Iris Effect? – Is there something in all of this that changes the sign; namely, that CO2 warming will be compensated by more cooling? Earth System: Ice SUN ICE: • Very important to reflection of solar radiation • Holds a lot of water (sea-level rise) • Insulates ocean from atmosphere (sea-ice) Ice impacts both radiative balance and water – oceans and water resources on land. . • Large “local” effects at pole. • Large global effects through ocean circulation and permafrost melting. • Might change very quickly. OCEAN CLOUD-WORLD ATMOSPHERE LAND ICE (cryosphere) The Earth System: ICE (Think a little more about ice) non-polar polar glaciers glaciers and (Greenland) snow (Antarctica) sea-ice Impacts regional water supply, agriculture, etc. Solar reflection, Ocean-atmosphere heat exchange Solar reflection, Ocean density, Sea-level rise (Tour of the cryosphere, Goddard Scientific Visualization Studio) Feedbacks • Ice-albedo, water vapor feedback are positive and definitive. • Feedbacks associated with melting in the Arctic are largely positive. – (WWF, Literature Assessment, 2009) • The only potentially negative feedback is associated with clouds, which is observed. • Complex role of particles in the atmosphere. • Theoretical and observational investigation concludes that feedbacks are substantially linear and positive. – (Roe and Baker, Science, 2007) The Cryosphere • TOUR OF CRYOSPHERE: MAIN NASA SITE Let’s think about the Arctic for a while • WWF: Arctic Feedbacks Assessment Projected Global Temperature Trends: 2100 2071-2100 temperatures relative to 1961-1990. Special Report on Emissions Scenarios Storyline B2 (middle of the road warming). IPCC 2001 The Thermohaline Circulation (THC) (Global, organized circulation in the ocean) (The “conveyer belt”, “rivers” within the ocean) Blue shading, low salt Where there is localized exchange of water between the surface and the deep ocean (convection) Green shading, high salt Warm, surface currents. Cold, bottom currents. From Jianjun Yin, GFDL, see J. Geophysical Research, 2006 The Earth System Increase greenhouse gases reduces cooling rate Warming SUN Solar variability Cloud feedback? Aerosols cool? ATMOSPHERE Water vapor feedback accelerates warming Cloud feedback? OCEAN ICE LAND Changes in land use impact absorption and reflection Ice-albedo feedback accelerates warming Iconic and Fundamental Figures Scientific investigation of Earth’s climate SUN: ENERGY, HEAT EARTH: ABSORBS ENERGY EARTH: EMITS ENERGY TO SPACE BALANCE Sun-Earth System in Balance SUN EARTH PLACE AN INSULATING BLANKET AROUND EARTH The addition to the blanket is CO2 FOCUS ON WHAT IS HAPPENING AT THE SURFACE EARTH: EMITS ENERGY TO SPACE BALANCE Increase of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide (CO2) Primary increase comes from burning fossil fuels – coal, oil, natural gas Data and more information Temperature and CO2: The last 1000 years Surface temperature and CO2 data from the past 1000 years. Temperature is a northern hemisphere average. Temperature from several types of measurements are consistent in temporal behavior. Medieval warm period “Little ice age” Temperature starts to follow CO2 as CO2 increases beyond approximately 300 ppm, the value seen in the previous graph as the upper range of variability in the past 350,000 years. The Earth System SUN CLOUD-WORLD ATMOSPHERE ICE (cryosphere) OCEAN LAND Radiation Balance Figure Radiative Balance (Trenberth et al. 2009)