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Causes of climate change The Fourth IPCC Report, 2007, WMO, Geneva (http://www.ipcc.ch/publications_and_data /publications_and_data_reports.htm) David Archer, 2007, Global warming, understanding the forecast, Blackwell Publishing Robert Henson, 2008, Climate change. The symptoms, the science, the solutions, Rough Guide, LTD. Reasons of climate change natural changes of orbital parameters anthropogenic changes in atmospheric composition changes of solar activity changes in land use volcanic activity urbanization orogeneza deforestration changes in continents position Orbital parameters of the Earth eccentricity of Earth orbit tilt of Earth axis precession The Earth orbit is an ellipse and the center of mass of the system is located in one of the focus of this ellipse. Orbital eccentricity shows how big is the difference between this ellipse and the circle. The eccentricity of an ellipse, usually denoted by ε or e, is the ratio of the distance between the foci to the length of the major axis. The eccentricity is necessarily between 0 and 1; it is zero if and only if a =b, in which case the ellipse is a circle. As the eccentricity tends to 1, the ellipse becomes more elongated, and the ratio a /b tends to infinity Orbital eccentricity The eccentricity of the Earth's orbit is currently about 0.0167. Over thousands of years, the eccentricity of the Earth's orbit varies from nearly 0.0034 to almost 0.058 as a result of gravitational attractions among the planets. At the moment the distance between the Earth and the Sun changes from 146 × 106 km to 156 × 106 km, czyli o ok. 10 × 106 km. Together with changes of the Earth-Sun distance there is a change in insolation (total solar radiation coming to the Earth from the Sun). The main cycle of orbital is about 100 000 years. Precession refers to a change in the orientation of the rotation axis of a rotating body. Axial precession is the movement of the rotational axis of an astronomical body, whereby the axis slowly traces out a cone. In the case of the Earth, this type of precession is also known as the precession of the equinoxes or precession of the equator. The Earth goes through one such complete precessional cycle in a period of approximately 25,800 years, during which the positions of stars as measured in the equatorial coordinate system will slowly change; the change is actually due to the change of the coordinates. Over this cycle the Earth's north axial pole moves from where it is now, within 1° of Polaris, in a circle around the ecliptic pole, with an angular radius of about 23.5 degrees. The shift is 1 degree in 72 years, where the angle is taken from the observer, not from the center of the circle. The effects of axial precession on the seasons, relative to perihelion and aphelion. The precession of the equinoxes can cause periodic climate change (Milankovitch cycles), because the hemisphere that experiences summer at perihelion and winter at aphelion (as the southern hemisphere does presently) is in principle prone to more severe seasons than the opposite hemisphere. In our solar system, the Earth's orbital plane is known as the ecliptic, and so the Earth's axial tilt is officially called the obliquity of the ecliptic. The Earth currently has an axial tilt of about 23.44°. The axis remains tilted in the same direction towards the stars throughout a year and this means that when a hemisphere (a northern or southern half of the earth) is pointing away from the Sun at one point in the orbit then half an orbit later (half a year later) this hemisphere will be pointing towards the Sun. This effect is the main cause of the seasons. Whichever hemisphere is currently tilted toward the Sun experiences more hours of sunlight each day, and the sunlight at midday also strikes the ground at an angle nearer the vertical and thus delivers more energy per unit surface area. The obliquity of the ecliptic is not a fixed quantity but changing over time in a cycle with a period of 41,000 years. Lower obliquity causes polar regions to receive less seasonally contrasting solar radiation, producing conditions more favorable to glaciation. Like changes in precession and eccentricity, changes in tilt influence the relative strength of the seasons, but the effects of the tilt cycle are particularly pronounced in the high latitudes where the great ice ages began. Obliquity is a major factor in glacial/interglacial fluctuations SUNSPOTS http://www.globalwarmingart.com/wiki/File:Sunspot_Numbers_png Svensmark H., 2007, Astronomy & Geophysics, 48: 1-19. Volcanic eruptions Explosive volcanic eruptions send enormous amounts of dust to stratosphere Why Study Volcanic Eruptions and Climate? It helps us to improve climate models. Radiative and dynamic aspects of models used for other problems can be tested by these large, episodic events. It allows us to make seasonal and interannual forecasts following large volcanic eruptions. Winter warming and summer cooling follow large tropical eruptions, like El Chichón (1982) and Pinatubo (1991). Summer Indian monsoon failure will follow large high latitude eruptions. From Alan Robock Why Study Volcanic Eruptions and Climate? It provides an analog for some parts of the nuclear winter theory. Rapid global aerosol transport and surface cooling from large aerosol loading provide natural analogs that support the nuclear winter theory. It allows us to separate the natural causes of interdecadal climate change from anthropogenic effects. The anthropogenic cause of recent global warming is strengthened after accounting for volcanic effects. The response to volcanic eruptions allows us to better understand the impacts of anthropogenic climate change on life. Biospheric responses and aspects of the carbon cycle have been clarified. 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 Effects on cirrus clouds Less Total Solar Flux More Downward IR Flux Volcanoes produced the atmosphere and the oceans Volcanic emissions N2 remains N2 CO2 photosynthesis O2 H2O condensation oceans 99% of atmosphere Mt. Erebus, Oct. 3, 2004 Volcanic eruptions Dust causes warming of the stratosphere and cooling of the troposphere Three months after the June 1991 eruption of Pinatubo volcano, much of the 20 million tons of ejected sulfur dioxide had been directed by zonal stratospheric winds and girdled the equator. Mt. Pinatubo Eruption & Impact Recorded changes in air temperature indicates the volcanic impact on climate. EFFECTS OF LARGE EXPLOSIVE TROPICAL VOLCANOES ON WEATHER AND CLIMATE EFFECT/MECHANISM 1. Enhance or reduce El Niño? BEGINS DURATION 1-2 weeks 1-2 months Tropospheric absorption of shortwave and longwave radiation, dynamics 2. Reduction of diurnal cycle Immediately 1-4 days Blockage of shortwave and emission of longwave radiation 3. Summer cooling of NH tropics, subtropics Immediately 1-2 years Blockage of shortwave radiation 4. Reduced tropical precipitation Immediately ~1 year Blockage of shortwave radiation, reduced evaporation 5. Reduced Sahel precipitation (?) 1-3 months 1-2 years Blockage of shortwave radiation, reduced land temp., reduced evaporation EFFECTS OF LARGE EXPLOSIVE TROPICAL VOLCANOES ON WEATHER AND CLIMATE EFFECT/MECHANISM BEGINS 6. Ozone depletion, enhanced UV DURATION 1 day 1-2 years Dilution, heterogeneous chemistry on aerosols 7. Global cooling Blockage of shortwave radiation Immediately 1-3 years multiple eruptions: 10-100 years 8. Stratospheric warming Immediately 1-2 years Stratospheric absorption of shortwave and longwave radiation 9. Winter warming of NH continents ½-1½ years 1 or 2 winters Stratospheric absorption of shortwave and longwave radiation, dynamics High latitude eruptions: 10. Cooling of continents Immediately 1-2 years Blockage of shortwave radiation 11. Reduction of Indian summer monsoon ½-1½ years 1 or 2 summers Continental cooling, reduction of land-sea temperature contrast Major volcanic eruptions of the past 250 years Volcano Year VEI d.v.i/Emax IVI Lakagígar [Laki craters], Iceland Unknown (El Chichón?) Tambora, Sumbawa, Indonesia Cosiguina, Nicaragua Askja, Iceland Krakatau, Indonesia Okataina [Tarawera], North Island, NZ Santa Maria, Guatemala Ksudach, Kamchatka, Russia Novarupta [Katmai], Alaska, US Agung, Bali, Indonesia Mt. St. Helens, Washington, US El Chichón, Chiapas, Mexico Mt. Pinatubo, Luzon, Philippines 1783 1809 1815 1835 1875 1883 1886 1902 1907 1912 1963 1980 1982 1991 4 2300 7 5 5 6 5 6 5 6 4 5 5 6 3000 4000 1000 1000 800 600 500 500 800 500 800 1000 0.19 0.20 0.50 0.11 0.01* 0.12 0.04 0.05 0.02 0.15 0.06 0.00 0.06 — Major volcanic eruptions of the past 250 years Volcano Year VEI d.v.i/Emax IVI Lakagígar [Laki craters], Iceland Unknown (El Chichón?) Tambora, Sumbawa, Indonesia Cosiguina, Nicaragua Askja, Iceland Krakatau, Indonesia Okataina [Tarawera], North Island, NZ Santa Maria, Guatemala Ksudach, Kamchatka, Russia Novarupta [Katmai], Alaska, US Agung, Bali, Indonesia Mt. St. Helens, Washington, US El Chichón, Chiapas, Mexico Mt. Pinatubo, Luzon, Philippines 1783 1809 1815 1835 1875 1883 1886 1902 1907 1912 1963 1980 1982 1991 4 2300 7 5 5 6 5 6 5 6 4 5 5 6 3000 4000 1000 1000 800 600 500 500 800 500 800 1000 0.19 0.20 0.50 0.11 0.01* 0.12 0.04 0.05 0.02 0.15 0.06 0.00 0.06 — Santorini, 1628 BC Tambora, 1815 Etna, 44 BC Lakagígar, 1783 Toba, 71,000 BP Pinatubo, 1991 Famous Volcanic Eruptions Krakatau, 1883 Agung, 1963 El Chichón, 1982 St. Helens, 1980 DISTRIBUTION OF SURFACE OCEAN CURRENTS Surface ocean currents in the Earth history Climate Change Triggers Figure 19.7A Figure 19.7B Earth's climate is affected by feedback loops such as the water vaporgreenhouse feedback, where increases in air temperature increases water vapor, which is a greenhouse gas that increases temperature. Plate tectonics and drift concentrated continents at higher latitudes allowed for more ice cover, which reflected more sunlight and created a positive feedback to cause greater cooling. Tropospheric Aerosols Auto emissions and wild land fires are 2 sources that emit aerosols into the troposphere that reduce incoming radiation and have a net cooling effect on earth's surface. Aerosols & Pollutants Human and natural activities displace tiny soil, salt, and ash particles as suspended aerosols, as well as sulfur and nitrogen oxides, and hydrocarbons as pollutants. Early Phase • Surface temperature might have been as high as 85 to 110 oC (compared to 15oC today) • Planet cooled, water vapor condensed to form clouds and rain, hence oceans • A lot of CO2 in atmosphere dissolved in rainwater • Life formed about 2 billion years ago, and photosynthesis produced oxygen (O2) • Ozone (O3) shield formed Evolution of Atmosphere: Early (Primeval) Phase • Earth's birth was about 4.6 billion years ago • Lava, ashes, gases from volcanoes ("outgassing") form Earth's primeval atmosphere, hugging planet due to gravitational field of Earth • Atmosphere consisted of mostly CO2 (carbon dioxide), N2 (nitrogen) and H2O (water vapor) Evolution of Atmosphere: Modern Phase • Main atmospheric components are N2 (78.08% by volume) and O2 (20.95%) in layer below 80 km; other constituents are water vapor, trace gases and aerosols – water vapor concentration is highly variable, ranging from 0 to 4% – trace amounts of CO2, O3 and other gases – aerosols in atmosphere are tiny liquid and solid particles from forest fires, wind erosion of soil, salt from ocean spray, volcanic emission, and meteoric dust Variable & Increasing Gases Nitrogen and oxygen concentrations experience little change, but carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxides, and chlorofluorocarbons are greenhouse gases experiencing discernable increases in concentration. FAQ 2.1, Figure 1. Atmospheric concentrations of important longlived greenhouse gases over the last 2,000 years. Increases since about 1750 are attributed to human activities in the industrial era. Concentration units are parts per million (ppm) or parts per billion (ppb), indicating the number of molecules of the greenhouse gas per million or billion air molecules, respectively, in an atmospheric sample. (Data combined and simplifi ed from Chapters 6 and 2 of this report.) IPCC 4th Report WG1 GWP Global Warming Potential IPCC, 4th Report, WG1 Figure 2.10. Schematic diagram showing the various radiative mechanisms associated with cloud effects that have been identified as signifi cant in relation to aerosols (modified from Haywood and Boucher, 2000). The small black dots represent aerosol particles; the larger open circles cloud droplets. Straight lines represent the incident and reflected solar radiation, and wavy lines represent terrestrial radiation. The filled white circles indicate cloud droplet number concentration (CDNC). The unperturbed cloud contains larger cloud drops as only natural aerosols are available as cloud condensation nuclei, while the perturbed cloud contains a greater number of smaller cloud drops as both natural and anthropogenic aerosols are available as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). The vertical grey dashes represent rainfall, and LWC refers to the liquid water content. Greenhouse effect Energy coming to the Earth’s surface S R S0 2 Energy coming to the unit of the Earth’s surface R2 S 0 1353 2 2 S W 338 W m m 2 4 R 4 Greenhouse effect S a (1 0.28) S 243W m 2 Energy absorbed by the unit of the Earth’s surface Ez T Ez Sa 4 z Energy emitted by the unit of the Earth’s surface Energy balance Effective temperature of the Earth T z 255.9K 17.3 C 0 Greenhouse effect Td Td Tz 4 4 4 4 2 4 4 2 Tz Td Td T z 2 255.9 K 304.5K 31 C 4 0