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Global Warming Archer chapters 1 & 2 GEO 307 Dr. Garver 5/24/2017 Chapter 1: Humankind & Climate • There is no doubt the Earth is warming. • Is it us? • What evidence are we seeing? • Weather vs. Climate • What’s the difference? 5/24/2017 • Human induced changes are expected to be small compared to variability. – T in this century expected to rise a few deg. – Hard to calculate a change in the avg. when the variability is so much greater than the trend. – In addition there is long term climate change. • Little Ice Age - 1650-1800 • Last glacial maximum (20,000 ybp) was only 5-6 deg C cooler than today 5/24/2017 Little Ice Age • Period of cooling 1550 AD and 1850 AD - after Medieval Climate Optimum 5/24/2017 Forecasting Climate Change • T of Earth is determined by balance of energy in and energy out. • Sun drives earth's climate, heats the earth's surface; earth radiates energy back into space. • It is possible to change the T of Earth by changing either incoming or outgoing energy. 5/24/2017 Climate Forcing: • Sunspots change output of sun • Changing reflection of Earth • Greenhouse effect 5/24/2017 • Most gases in the atmosphere are not gh gases. • Greenhouse gases (water vapor, carbon dioxide, methane) trap some of the outgoing energy. – Water vapor is tricky, it amplifies the warming effects from changes in other gh gases. • Without "greenhouse effect," T would be much lower, life would not be possible. 5/24/2017 Human Activity • Carbon dioxide - burning fossils fuels • Methane - landfills, livestock, rice cultivation • Particulates - smokestacks, combustion engines. 5/24/2017 Asessing the Risk • Forecast is an increase of 2-5 deg by 2100. • Models - Used to forecast increase in T and the results of that increase. – many are economic 5/24/2017 Greenhouse Effect 5/24/2017 Chapter 2: Blackbody Radiation • Electromagnetic Radiation • Energy travels through a vacum from Sun to Earth. • Objects can absorb energy and re-emit it. • Black Body - any object that is a perfect emitter and a perfect absorber of radiation • sun and earth's surface behave approximately as black bodies. 5/24/2017 Radiant energy • transfer of energy via electromagnetic waves. • Radiation – examples: • sun warms your face • apparent heat of a fire • wavelength, frequency 5/24/2017 Energy through a vacum • EMR - travels as wavelengths • c = speed of light, constant • relates frequency to wavelength. • fig 2.2 5/24/2017 Common wavelengths • units of micrometers are often used to characterize the wavelength of radiation • 1 micrometer = 10-6 meters • paper is about 100 micrometers thick 5/24/2017 Radiation emitted by objects • All objects that have a T greater than 0 deg K emit radiation • hot objects emit more radiation that colder objects • Need to know much radiation is being emitted by an object, and at what wavelengths. 5/24/2017 Black Body Radiation • Black Body - any object that is a perfect emitter and a perfect absorber of radiation – sun and earth surfaces behave approximately as black bodies 5/24/2017 Stefan-Boltzman Law • relates the total amount of radiation emitted by an object to its temperature: E=sT4 where: E = total amount of radiation emitted by an object per square meter (Watts m-2) s is a constant = 5.67 x 10-8 Watts m-2 K-4 T is the temperature of the object 5/24/2017 • Josef Stefan, (1835 – 1893) Austrian physicist - 1879 formulated a law which states that the radiant energy of a black body is proportional to the fourth power of its temperature. • One first important steps toward understanding of radiation. • Five years after he derived his law empirically, it was derived theoretically by Ludwig Boltzmann of Austria and hence became known as the Stefan–Boltzmann law. 5/24/2017 Weins Law • Most objects emit radiation at many wavelengths • There is one wavelength where an object emits the largest amount of radiation lmax = 2897 (mm K) T (K) • At what wavelength does the sun emit most of its radiation? • At what wavelength does the earth emit most of its radiation? 5/24/2017 • Also called Wien’s displacement law • Named after German physicist Wilhelm Wien, who received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1911 for discovering the law. 5/24/2017 Temperature Scales • Kelvin • Celsius • Fahrenheit • Temperature Conversions: ºC = 5/9(ºF-32) K = ºC + 273 Absolute zero at 0 K is −273.15 °C (−459.67 °F) 5/24/2017 What are the similarities and differences between the Sun and Earth radiation curves? 5/24/2017 percentages in each wavelength band 5/24/2017 Radiative Equilibrium If the T of an object is constant with time, the object is in radiative equilibrium at Te What happens if energy input > energy output? What happens if energy input < energy output? Is the earth in radiative equilibrium? 5/24/2017 Radiative Equilibrium for the Earth • • Energy gained through absorption of short wave radiation is equal to the emitted long wave radiation So, what is the radiative equilibrium temperature for the earth? 5/24/2017 Radiative Equilibrium Temperature for the Earth • Use Stefan-Boltzman Law • Simplified case of no atmosphere • Te = 255 Kelvin • earth should be frozen! • actual Te = 288 K 5/24/2017 • Earth emits 240 Watts m2 Using E = sTe4 then Te = (E/s)1/4 • So, for the simplified case of no atmosphere Te= 255 K • But Te = 288 K • What is the reason for why the observed Te is warmer than what we calculated using the Stefan-Boltzman law??? 5/24/2017 5/24/2017 Interaction of Solar Radiation and the Atmosphere • Based on last figure, ~1/2 of incoming sw radiation makes it to surface • ~19% is absorbed by gasses in the atmosphere • Therefore, the atmosphere is fairly transparent to incoming solar radiation. • Does the atmosphere have interaction with lw radiation emitted by earth??? 5/24/2017 Sun – Range of primary wavelengths 5/24/2017 Earth – Range of primary wavelengths Interaction of Long Wave Radiation and the Atmosphere • • • • • Some lw radiation emitted by earth escapes to space Some lw is absorbed by gasses in atmosphere These gasses then re-emit some =lw radiation back to the ground The additional lw radiation reaching the ground further warms the earth This is known as the "greenhouse effect" 5/24/2017 • • • • • Methane (CH4) Carbon Dioxide (CO2) Ozone (O3) Water Vapor (H2O) Nitrous Oxide (N2O) 5/24/2017