* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download The Sun - Driving Force for Climate
Advanced Composition Explorer wikipedia , lookup
History of Solar System formation and evolution hypotheses wikipedia , lookup
Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems wikipedia , lookup
Extraterrestrial life wikipedia , lookup
Astronomical unit wikipedia , lookup
Comparative planetary science wikipedia , lookup
Tropical year wikipedia , lookup
Formation and evolution of the Solar System wikipedia , lookup
10-1 The Sun - Driving Force for Climate Physical Climate Systems Climate Change Stratospheric Chemistry/Dynamics Sun Volcanoes Ocean Dynamics Terrestrial Energy/Moisture Global Moisture Marine/ Biogeochemistry Soil Terrestrial Ecosystems Tropospheric Chemistry Biogeochemical Systems Human Activities CO2 Human Forcing External Forcing Atmospheric Physics/Dynamics Land Use CO2 Pollutants Climate and Global Change Notes The Sun - Driving Force for Climate Solar Radiation and Its Variability 10-2 Science Concepts The Sun Solar Radiation Source Nuclear Fusion Process Einstein’s E = m c2 Law Solar System Sun Spots 1/R2 Law Intensity Angle of Incidence Spherical Shape of Earth Axis of Rotation Orbital Plane Solar Radiation Variability Solar Output Variations Planet-to-Planet Variations Latitudinal Variations Seasonal Variations Long-Term Variations Milankovitch Cycles Eccentricity Precession Obliquity The Earth System (Kump, Kastin & Crane) • • Chap. 1 (pp. 14-15) Chap. 15 (p. 303-306) • • Chap. 4 (pp. 58-59; 66-68) Chap. 14 (pp.and 274-278) Climate Global Change Notes The Sun - Driving Force for Climate 10-3 The Sun • Introduction Science quotes of 5th and 6th graders - QuickTime™ and a Cinepak decompressor are needed to see this picture. Most books now say our Sun is a star. But it still knows how to change back into a Sun in the daytime. Climate and Global Change Notes The Sun - Driving Force for Climate 10-4 The Sun (Con’t) • • Medium size star - Diameter = 1.39 x 10 6 km (109 times the diameter of Earth) - Mass = 2.0 x 10 30 kg (3.3 x 10 5 times the mass of Earth) QuickTime™ and a Video decompressor are needed to see this picture. Rotation period = average ~27 days - Variable rotation; Equatorial regions (~25 days) faster than polar regions (~35 days) Extreme uv (30.4 nm) Image Climate and Global Change Notes The Sun - Driving Force for Climate The Sun (Con’t) • http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/ Coronal Mass Ejection over 8-h period 5-6 August 1999 Average temperature star - • 10-5 Interior temperature 15 x 10 6 K Exterior skin temperature 6000 K QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Interior pressure = 100 x 10 9 times the surface pressure of the Earth http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/ X-Ray Image QuickTime™ and a Microsoft Video 1 decompressor are needed to see this picture. 171 10-10 m emission showing the solar corona at a temperature of about 1.3 million K QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Climate and Global Change Notes The Sun - Driving Force for Climate 10-6 The Sun (Con’t) • Plot of the relative number of stars vs absolute magnitude shows that fainter stars (large magnitudes) are much more numerous than brighter stars • The Sun is more luminous than the majority of stars Climate and Global Change Notes QuickTime™ and a Video decompressor are needed to see this picture. 10-7 The Sun - Driving Force for Climate Solar Radiation • Energy Source - • Nuclear “fusion” of hydrogen to make helium, i.e., H2 + H2 => He4 Energy Amount - Converts 657 x 106 tons of H2 per s (596 x 109 kg / s) - Produces 653 x 106 tons of He2 per s (592 x 109 kg / s) - Thus, about 4 x 109 kg / s of mass is converted to energy Science quotes of 5th and 6th graders When they broke open molecules, they found they were only stuffed with atoms. But when they broke open atoms, they found them stuffed with explosions. This is fission. - Using Einstein's formula, E = m c2 where E is Energy; m is Mass; c is Speed of light,3 x 108 m / s. Dividing by time, t, yields P = E / t = ( m c2 ) / t where P is Power - Substituting the values for the Sun yields about P = 3.6 x 1026 watts > Note a watt equals a cal / s Climate and Global Change Notes 10-8 Solar Radiation Variability Solar Output Variability • Sunspots appear as dark spots where temperatures in the centers drop to about 3,700 K • Sunspots typically last several days; very large ones may last for several weeks • Sunspots are magnetic regions with magnetic field strengths thousands of times stronger than the Earth's magnetic field • Sunspots usually come in groups • Not many sunspots at this time, but sometimes monthly average is over a hundred http://science.msfc.nasa.gov/ssl/ pad/solar/feature1.htm#Sunspots http://spaceweather.com/ 2/25/04 Climate and Global Change Notes 10-9 Solar Radiation Variability Solar Output Variability (Con’t) • Sunspot number • Note 11 year solar or sunspot cycle • Amount of energy emitted by the Sun is related to the sunspot cycle http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/VariableSun/ Climate and Global Change Notes 10-10 Solar Radiation Variability Solar Output Variability (Con’t) • Variations in solar irradiance at the top of the Earth’s atmosphere over the last 120 years - Note 11-year solar or sunspot cycle - Very slight increase over this 100+ record Bulletin of American Meteorological Society, June 2003, p. 743 http://www.doc.mmu.ac.uk/aric/gccsg/2-5-3.html Climate and Global Change Notes 10-11 The Solar System Percentage Mass of Components • • To be a planet, an object must meet three criteria: Sun: 99.85% Planets: 0.135% (1) It must have enough mass and gravity to gather itself into a ball. (2) It must orbit the sun. • Comets: 0.01% ? • Satellites: 0.00005% • Minor Planets: 0.0000002% ? • Meteoroids: 0.0000001% ? • Interplanetary Medium: 0.0000001% ? • Jupiter consists of more than twice the matter of all the other planets combined (3) It must reign supreme in its own orbit, having "cleared the neighborhood" of other competing bodies. Climate and Global Change Notes 10-12 The Solar System Description • Sun and 8 planets and dwarf planets (Pluto and others) • Satellites of the planets, numerous comets, asteroids, meteoroids, and the interplanetary medium Mercury Earth Jupiter Saturn Sun Venus Mars Uranus http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/ Neptune Pluto & other dwarf planets Climate and Global Change Notes 10-13 The Solar System 10th Planet Discovered?? http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/ y2005/29jul_planetx.htm?list159742 • 29 July 29 2005 - Astronomers discovered a new planet beyond Pluto, about 97 times farther from the Sun than Earth, i.e., 97 Astronomical Units (AU). • Scientists working to better estimate its size and its motions. They believe it is bigger than Pluto • Astronomers determine a planets size by measuring its brightness • Planets shine by reflecting sunlight The bigger the planet, generally speaking, the more reflection The planet's temporary name is 2003 UB313. A permanent name has been proposed to the International Astronomical Union QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Climate and Global Change Notes 10-14 The Solar System 10th Planet Discovered?? (Con’t) • • August 2006 - International Astronomical Union (IAU) General Assembly in Prague, stated that to be a planet an object must meet three criteria: - it must have enough mass and gravity to gather itself into a ball. - it must orbit the sun. - it must reign supreme in its own orbit, having "cleared the neighborhood" of other competing bodies. Thus, Pluto and 2003 UB313 and several other objects circling the Sun in orbits similar to Pluto’s were defined as "dwarf planets” Climate and Global Change Notes 10-15 The Solar System Planet Plus Pluto Statistical Information Name Dist Radius Mass Rot Sat Incl Eccen Den Sun 0. 109. 332800. 25.-36.* 9. -.- -.- 1.41 Mercury 0.39 0.38 0.05 58.8 0. 7. 0.2056 5.43 Venus 0.72 0.95 0.89 244. 0. 3.394 0.0068 5.25 Earth 1.0 1.00 1.00 1.000 1. 0.000 0.0167 5.52 Mars 1.5 0.53 0.11 1.029 2. 1.850 0.0934 3.95 Jupiter 5.2 11. 318. 0.411 16. 1.308 0.0483 1.33 Saturn 9.5 9. 95. 0.428 18. 2.488 0.0560 0.69 Uranus 19.2 4. 15. 0.748 15. 0.774 0.0461 1.29 Neptune 30.1 4. 17. 0.802 8. 1.774 0.0097 1.64 Pluto 39.5 0.18 0.002 0.267 1. 17.15 0.2482 2.03 Dist = Distance to the Sun in AUs Mass = Mass in terms of the Earth’s Sat = Number of associated satellites Eccen = Orbital eccentricity Radius = Radius in terms of the Earth’s Rotate = Rotation rate in Earth days Incl = Orbital inclination in degrees Den = Density in g/m3 * Sun’s period of rotation at the surface varies from ~25 days at the equator to 36 days at the poles. Deep down, below the convective zone, the period of rotation appears to be 27 days. Climate and Global Change Notes 10-16 Solar Radiation Variability Solar Radiation Intensity • Intensity = energy per unit time per unit area = power per unit area; power - Units > cal / s - m2 or watt / m2 ‡ watt = cal / s Solar Energy the Earth Receives • Sun’s energy is emitted in all directions • Intensity of the Sun’s energy decreases as the square of the distance from the Sun (radius of planet’s orbit) increases, i.e., referred to as the “One Over R 2 Law” I a 1 / (distance ) 2 or I a 1 / R2 Climate and Global Change Notes 10-17 Solar Radiation Variability Solar Energy the Earth Receives (Con’t) • The Earth intercepts only a small portion of the Sun’s energy; about 1.62 x 10 17 watts • Solar power the Earth receives adds up to 18,000 times more energy than humankind consumes as fuel and commercial energy Climate and Global Change Notes 10-18 Solar Radiation Variability Solar Energy the Planets Receive Name Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto Dist (m) 5.85 X 10 10 1.08 X 10 11 1.50 X 10 11 2.25 X 10 11 7.80 X 10 11 1.43 X 10 12 2.88 X 10 12 4.52 X 10 12 5.93 X 10 12 Radius (m) 2.42 X 10 6 6.05 X 10 6 6.37 X 10 6 3.38 X 10 6 7.01 X 10 7 5.73 X 10 7 2.55 X 10 7 2.55 X 10 7 1.15 X 10 6 Energy Received* (watts) 1.54 X 10 17 2.83 X 10 17 1.62 X 10 17 2.03 X 10 16 7.26 X 10 17 1.46 X 10 17 7.04 X 10 15 2.87 X 10 15 3.37 X 10 15 Dist = Distance to the Sun Radius = Planet’s radius Energy Received = Energy received from the Sun • Calculations based on numbers from the class laboratory exercise. More precise numbers will yield slightly different results. Mercury Earth Jupiter Saturn Sun Venus Mars Uranus Neptune Pluto Climate and Global Change Notes 10-19 Solar Radiation Variability Radiation Balance Assumption Name Mercury Venus Earth Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus Neptune Pluto Temp (K) 438. 322. 274. 223. 120. 89. 62. 50. 44. Temp with Albedo (K) 228. (75%) 250. (30%) 215. (15%) Incoming Solar Radiation Solid Planet Outgoing Radiation Temp = Planet’s average temperature assuming planet is a solid globe with no atmosphere and no albedo Temp with Albedo = Planet’s average temperature assuming planet is a solid globe with no atmosphere, but with an albedo Climate and Global Change Notes 10-20 Solar Radiation Variability Solar Angle and Intensity • • Area of a flashlight beam spreads over a larger area as the flashlight moves from directly overhead to a more glancing angle Intensity decreases as the angle between the light’s rays and the surface decreases Directly Overhead Glancing Angle Side View Overhead View Climate and Global Change Notes 10-21 Solar Radiation Variability Solar Angle and Intensity (Con’t) • Global variability - QuickTime™ and a YUV420 codec decompressor are needed to see this picture. Tilt of axis effect on solar intensity http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a000000/a000077/index.html Climate and Global Change Notes 10-22 Solar Radiation Variability Solar Angle and Intensity (Con’t) • Intensity decreases as the angle between the Sun's rays and the Earth's surface decreases > Axis of Rotation Glancing Angle Directly Overhead Angle increases as move away from tropics QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Climate and Global Change Notes 10-23 Solar Radiation Variability Solar Angle and Intensity (Con’t) • Intensity decreases as the depth of atmosphere penetrated increases Axis of Rotation Solar Rays Penetration QuickTime™ and a Depth TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Solar Rays Penetration Depth Atmospheric Layer Climate and Global Change Notes 10-24 Solar Radiation Variability • Global variability 2) • - Radiation Intensity ( W / m Solar Angle and Intensity (Con’t) Spherical shape of the Earth 400 300 200 100 90N Local variability - Solar Radiation Intensity Received 50N 30N 10N 0 10S 30S 50S 90S Latitude Mountains > Southside for wine in NY > North side for ski slopes in NY Climate and Global Change Notes 10-25 Solar Radiation Variability Earth’s Orbit • Note: Orbit is elliptical; it has an eccentricity September 23 December 22 Perihelion About January 3 Sun 152 x 106 km Aphelion About July 4 June 22 147 x 106 km March 21 Climate and Global Change Notes 10-26 Solar Radiation Variability Seasons • Caused by the tilt of the Earth's axis with respect to the plane of the Earth's orbit - Changes both the angle between the Sun's rays and the Earth's surface and the depth of atmospheric penetration - Changes the length of daylight - Example: December solstice (Northern Hemisphere Winter solstice) Factoids A planet’s rotation and tilt are result of collisions. Uranus axis is tilted 90°. Venus rotates east to west instead of west to east like the Earth. Climate and Global Change Notes 10-27 Solar Radiation Variability Seasons (Con’t) • Earth’s annual trip around the Sun http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a000000/a000077/index.html Climate and Global Change Notes 10-28 Solar Radiation Variability Seasons (Con’t) • Satellite view looking down on the North Pole Climate and Global Change Notes 10-29 Solar Radiation Variability Seasons (Con’t) • Satellite view looking up at the South Pole Climate and Global Change Notes 10-30 Solar Radiation Variability Universal Time d 2006 Perihelion Jan 4 Aphelion Jul 3 h d h m d h m 15 23 Equinoxes Solstices Mar 20 18 26 Jun 21 12 26 Sep 23 04 03 Dec 22 00 22 2007 Perihelion Jan 3 Aphelion Jul 7 20 00 Equinoxes Solstices Mar 21 00 07 Jun 21 18 06 Sep 23 09 51 Dec 22 06 08 2008 Perihelion Jan 3 Aphelion Jul 4 00 08 Equinoxes Solstices Mar 20 5 48 Jun 20 23 59 Sep 22 15 44 Dec 21 12 04 2009 Perihelion Jan 4 Aphelion Jul 4 15 02 Equinoxes Solstices Mar 20 11 44 Jun 21 5 45 Sep 22 21 18 Dec 21 17 47 2010 Perihelion Jan 3 Aphelion Jul 6 00 11 Equinoxes Solstices Mar 20 17 32 Jun 21 11 28 Sep 23 03 09 Dec 21 23 38 2011 Perihelion Jan 3 Aphelion Jul 4 19 15 Equinoxes Solstices Mar 20 23 21 Jun 21 17 16 Sep 23 09 04 Dec 22 05 30 http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/EarthSeasons.html Climate and Global Change Notes 10-31 Solar Radiation Variability Seasons (Con’t) • View of Earth from the Sun throughout the year • North and South poles are denoted by June Solstice June 21-22 Sun Vertical at Latitude 23.5°N September Equinox September 21-22 Sun Vertical at Latitude 0° December Solstice December 21-22 Sun Vertical at Latitude 23.5°S March Equinox March 21-22 Sun Vertical at Latitude 0° Climate and Global Change Notes 10-32 Solar Radiation Variability Seasons (Con’t) • Earth year animation from the Sun’s point of view Climate and Global Change Notes Global Radiation Budget Variations Seasons (Con’t) Summer - 6/21 23:00 UTC 10-33 http://www.fourmilab.ch/cgi-bin/Earth From 0° Winter - 12/21 23:00 UTC Sun’s Rays Circle of illumination Climate and Global Change Notes Global Radiation Budget Variations Seasons (Con’t) Summer - 6/21 23:00 UTC 10-34 http://www.fourmilab.ch/cgi-bin/Earth From 45°S Arctic Circle Winter - 12/21 23:00 UTC Climate and Global Change Notes 10-35 Solar Radiation Variability Special Latitudes • Based on the Sun’s angle with the Earth’s surface NP Arctic Circle 23.5° Tropic of Cancer 66.5°N Equator 23.5°N Tropic of Capricorn Antarctic Circle 0° 23.5°S 66.5°S Axis of Rotation Climate and Global Change Notes 10-36 Solar Radiation Variability Seasons (Con’t) • Antarctic Daylight QuickTime™ and a YUV420 codec decompressor are needed to see this picture. Climate and Global Change Notes 10-37 Solar Radiation Variability Solstice Shadows at Local Noon June 21, '02 Where Length of shadow Your height North Pole (90°N) 2.3 Los Angeles (34°N) 0.19 Huntsville (34°N) 0.19 New York (41°N) 0.31 Buenos Aires (34°S) 1.6 Johannesburg (26°S) 1.2 South Pole (90°S) no shadow Dec. 22, '02 Shaq's (7’ 1”) Shadow Length of shadow Max - Min (ft, in) Your height no shadow 16' 4" 1.6 1' 4” - 11' 4 1.6 1' 4” - 11' 4 2.1 2' 2” - 14' 11" 0.19 1' 4” - 11' 4" 0.05 0' 4” - 8' 5” 2.3 16' 4" The ratio of your height and the length of your shadow at local noon on Jun 21st and Dec 22nd. To calculate how long your shadow would be on the first day of summer in N.Y., multiply your height by 0.31 -- the ratio listed for N.Y. on Jun 21. Length of shadow = Your height * tan (90° - Sun elevation @ local noon) Sun elevation @ local noon = 90° - (Location’s latitude ± 23.5°) where you use - if Sun is in your hemisphere and + if sun in alternate hemisphere Climate and Global Change Notes 10-38 Global Radiation Budget Variations Seasons (Con’t) Solar Parameters for: • • • • Huntsville, AL (Latitude: 34.4°N) June Solstice (Northern Hemisphere Summer) Maximum solar altitude angle: 79.1° Longest day: 14.5 hours Shortest night: 9.5 hours Philadelphia, PA (Latitude: 40.0°N) 73.5° 15 hours 9 hours September Equinox (Northern Hemisphere Fall) Solar altitude angle: 55.6° Day: 12 hours Night: 12 hours 50.0° 12 hours 12 hours December Solstice (Northern Hemisphere Winter) Minimum solar altitude angle: 32.1° Shortest day: 9.5 hours Longest night: 14.5 hours 26.5° 9 hours 15 hours March Equinox (Northern Hemisphere Spring) Solar altitude angle: 55.6° Day: 12 hours Night: 12 hours 50.0° 12 hours 12 hours Climate and Global Change Notes Global Radiation Budget Variations 10-39 Seasons (Con’t) All's Right With The World by Robert Browning (1812 - 1889) The years at the spring The day's at the morn Morning's at seven The hill-side's dew-pearled The lark's on the wing The snail's on the throne God's in his heaven... All's right with the world! Great poem but does the science seem correct? Climate and Global Change Notes 10-40 Solar Radiation Variability Seasons (Con’t) Science quotes of 5th and 6th graders - • South America has cold summers and hot Insolation - Incoming solar radiation Solar energy per unit area at the Earth’s surface • Same as solar energy intensity • Annual variation • Note: Southern Hemisphere receives more radiation during its summer (January) than does the Northern Hemisphere during its summer (July) - winters, but somehow they still manage. QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncom pressed) decomp ressor are n eeded to see this picture. Remember Earth is closer to the Sun in July than January Climate and Global Change Notes 10-41 Milankovitch Cycles Earth’s Orbit • Orbit changes with time in three ways Milankovitch (Serbian astronomer) 1943 http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/paleo/sli des/images/base/iceage11.gif Eccentricity • Defined as e = (a2 - b2)1/2 / a where a is the semi-major axis and b is the semi-minor axis http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/ Library/Giants/Milankovitch/ milankovitch.html b a Earth • Sun Currently e = 0.0167 http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/ Giants/Milankovitch/milankovitch_2.html Climate and Global Change Notes 10-42 Milankovitch Cycles Eccentricity (Con’t) • Jupiter’s gravitational force results in Earth’s orbit varying from nearly circular with eccentricity near 0.0 to about 0.06 http://www.museum.state.il.us/exhibits/ ice_ages/eccentricity_graph.html 413,000 years 100,000 years Eccentricity of the Earth's orbit over the last 750,000 years Blue line traces the eccentricity of the elliptical orbit as it varies from circular (0.0); red line shows today's value for comparison. Berger and Loutre (1991) • Current difference in distance to the Sun at perihelion and aphelion is 3-4% • Period - Dominate period of 413,000 and minor period of 100,000 years Climate and Global Change Notes 10-43 Milankovitch Cycles Obliquity • Change in the tilt of the Earth's axis • Period — 41,000 years • Changes between ~22.1° and ~24.5° - • Current tilt of axis is 23.5° but 23.5° tilt varies from 22.1° to 24.5° Orbital Plane Sun Moon helps stabilize the obliquity; without the Moon this variation in the tilt could range much larger. The obliquity angle could reach 85° Less tilt implies - More snow at poles because more moisture - Cooler summers, thus less snow melt - Therefore, good conditions for initiation of glaciers http://earthobservatory. nasa.gov/Library/Giants /Milankovitch/milankovit ch_2.html Climate and Global Change Notes 10-44 Milankovitch Cycles Obliquity • Variation in the tilt of the Earth's axis over the last 750,000 years Blue line traces the tilt in degrees; red line shows today's value for comparison Berger and Loutre (1991) http://www.museum.state.il.us/exhibits/ice_ages/tilt_graph.html Climate and Global Change Notes 10-45 Milankovitch Cycles Obliquity (Con’t) • Change in Ice for past 21,000 years (1/2 period) • Matches change in obliquity from 22.1° to 23.5° http://geochange.er.usgs.gov/pub /sea_level/Core/raw/quaternary/ images/gif/ice_age.gif Climate and Global Change Notes 10-46 Milankovitch Cycles Precession • Wobble in the tilt of the Earth's axis • Period — 22,000 years • Like spinning top • Changes hemispheric climate not whole Earth QuickTime™ and a Sorenson Video 3 decompressor are needed to see this picture. http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/Giants/ Milankovitch/milankovitch_2.html Planetary axes would not precess or change obliquity if the planets were perfect spheres. However planetary rotation causes the equators to bulge. This gives a “handle” that the gravity of the other planets “grabs onto”, and twists the planetary spin. This causes precession and obliquity changes. Climate and Global Change Notes 10-47 Milankovitch Cycles Precession (Con’t) • Precession of the equinox over the last 750,000 years Blue line traces the precession; red line shows today's value Berger and Loutre (1991) http://www.museum.state.il.us/exhibits/ice_ages/precession_graph.html Climate and Global Change Notes 10-48 Milankovitch Cycles Precession (Con’t) • September Current December Sun June March September • 11,000 years from now December Sun June March Climate and Global Change Notes 10-49 Milankovitch Cycles Precession (Con’t) • Stars that Earth’s axis of rotation point as the axis precesses • Note this means the pole star changes with time • Currently Earth’s axis points toward “Polaris” Past, Present & Future Pole Stars Year c. 3,000BC c. 1,000BC Present c. 4,000AD c. 7,500AD c. 14,000AD Constellation Draco Usra Minor Usra Minor Cassiopeia Cepheus Lyra Closest Star Thuban Kochab Polaris Alrai Aldera min Vega http://inkido.indiana.edu/a100/celestialsphere2.html Climate and Global Change Notes 10-50 Milankovitch Cycles Precession (Con’t) • http://www.ukexpert.co.uk/photopost/ data/588/7the-pyramids.jpg Dating the Pyramids - Egyptian pyramids at Giza were built roughly 4,500 years ago. How do we know? > By determining how long each individual Pharaoh held power, adding all the years and working backwards ‡ Not very accurate > Carbon dating ‡ Provides dates for the pyramids plus or minus 100 years > Astronomical dating The Ancient Egyptians aligned the sides of their pyramids to the points of the compass, with extraordinary accuracy. The most accurate is the Pyramid of Khufu, called the Great Pyramid. The east and west sides miss True North by less than three minutes of arc (roughly one tenth the diameter of the full moon). It took over 4,000 years before the astronomer, Tycho Brahe, was able to take astronomical measurements to a greater accuracy. Climate and Global Change Notes 10-51 Milankovitch Cycles Precession (Con’t) • How did they manage to align the sides so accurately with the North Pole? Look at the time lapse photograph of stars over a full night. Note all the visible stars appear to move in circles (some big and some small). Today the star Polaris (The North Star or Pole Star) makes a very small circle indicating that it’s very near the Celestial North Pole. QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Because of precession, the Earth’s axis of rotation is slowly sweeping out a great circle, pointing to different parts of the sky. In the years when the pyramids were being built, two stars, Mizar (Eta-Ursae Majoris) in the Big Dipper and Kochab (Beta-Ursae Minoris) in the Little Dipper, appeared to rotate around the Celestial North Pole. Star trails as the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT) watches the night sky. CREDIT: Nik Szymanek. http://outreach.jach.hawaii.edu/pressroom/2003-estar/ukirtnight-small.jpg Climate and Global Change Notes 10-52 Milankovitch Cycles Precession (Con’t) Precession is actually an advantage for dating the pyramids. If you use the method outlined to the right before 2,467 BC, your line would be slightly to the west of True North and after that date you'd be to the east of True North. The Pyramids of Giza show exactly this relationship - the earlier ones are aligned slightly to the west, and the later ones slightly to the east. Using this method, dates of when the pyramids were built have been calculated to within five years or so. In 2,467 BC, it would have been quite easy to find True North. You'd have to build some scaffolding, and hang a string with a heavy weight. This would hang perfectly vertically, pointing to the center of the Earth. Then you'd wait until Mizar and Kochab were vertically aligned exactly with your hanging string. Then a line from you, to the hanging string, would point due north to the horizon. http://www.abc.net.au/science/k2/moments/s221162.htm Climate and Global Change Notes 10-53 Milankovitch Cycles Periods of Change (Con’t) Climate and Global Change Notes 10-54 Milankovitch Cycles Periods of Change (Con’t) • Resulting change Climate and Global Change Notes 10-55 Milankovitch Cycles 65°N Insolation and Glacial Cycles • Milankovitch theory suggests Earth orbital changes result in the observed 100 kyr cycle in ice ages • Gray bars indicate interglacial periods, defined here as deviations in 5 kyr average of at least 0.8 standard deviations above mean • Data Quinn et al. (1991), Jonathan Levine's insolation calculator and Lisiecki and Raymo (2005) QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Milankovitch_Variations.png This image was produced by Dragons flight from publicly available . data, and is released under the GFDL Lisiecki, L. E., and M. E. Raymo, 2005: A Pliocene-Pleistocene stack of 57 globally distributed benthic d18O records. Paleoceanography, 20. Quinn, T.R. et al., 1991: A three million year integration of the Earth's orbit. The Astronomical Journal, 101, 2287-2305. Climate and Global Change Notes 10-56 Milankovitch Cycles Temperature and Ice Ages • Comparison of Antarctic ice core temperature changes to changes in global ice volume • Note they are highly correlated • Red horizontal lines indicate modern temperatures and ice volume • Note Antarctic temperature http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ice_Age_Temperature.png This image was produced by Dragons flight from publicly available records show that the present data, and is released under the GFDL interglacial seems to be relatively cool compared to previous interglacials QuickTime™ and a TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor are needed to see this picture. Climate and Global Change Notes 10-57 Solar Radiation Variability Earth’s Annual Temperature Cycle at 900 m b 1 km / 3,300 ft Red = 20 Year Average Yellow = 2003 Data Green = 2004 Data Short Yellow = 2005 Data QuickTime™ and a TIFF (LZW) decompressor are needed to see this picture. http://pm-esip.nsstc.nasa.gov/ Climate and Global Change Notes