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Chapter 2 Solar Heating
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(Variations in) Solar Heating Power Weather Important Global and Seasonal Variations: Low latitudes receive more solar heating than high latitudes Amount of solar heating varies by season, especially at higher latitudes Solar Heating: electromagnetic radiation (mainly light) from the Sun warms the Earth’s surface (which heats the troposphere).
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Electromagnetic Radiation
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Solar heating is greater at low latitudes than high latitudes Less incident radiation per unit area (i.e., heat/m 2 ) at high latitudes Also, more reflection (on average) at high latitudes (angle, ice), radiation passes thru more air
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Sun at 90 o Maximum heating Sun at 45 o Heating cut by 1/3 Sun at 30 o Heating cut by 1/2 Low Sun Angle Causes Less Heating
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Earth-Sun Relations
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Earth’s Inclined Spin Axis and Orbit Around the Sun Creates the Seasons
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Length of Daylight Summer Solstice Winter Solstice Spring/Fall Equinox
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Summer Solstice: High sun angle, long days (15 hours in Orem) Sun rises and sets to north of due east & west respectively At 40 o N latitude (Orem)
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Fall and Spring Equinoxes : Medium sun angle, 12 hour days Sun rises due east, sets due west At 40 o N latitude (Orem)
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Winter Solstice: Low sun angle, short days (9 hrs 15 min in Orem) Sun rises and sets well south of due east & west, respectively At 40 o N latitude (Orem)
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View due west along 17 th South, Spring Equinox sunset, SLC
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Note the shadow. Near the Tropic of Cancer just before the Summer Solstice the sun is nearly straight overhead.
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Why don’t the tropics get hotter and hotter,while the poles cool? page 167 On average, more heat enters Earth-atmosphere system than leaves at low latitudes and vice versa at high latitudes
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Interactions of Sunlight with the Atmosphere and Solid Earth Scattering Reflection Absorption Re-radiation
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Reflection Energy in the light is lost back to space Air, clouds, ground reflect light Albedo is the percentage of light that a substance reflects Earth’s albedo ~ 30% Snow ~ 80-90% Water 5-80% (!) Moon 7%
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Scattering Light ray is split into multiple weaker rays that head off in various directions Some energy is lost to space Air tends to scatter blue light; red light is scattered much less
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Scattering is Why the Sky is Blue and Sunsets are Red
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What Happens to Solar Radiation? 50% absorbed by land & sea 20% absorbed by atmosphere and clouds 30% lost to space by reflection and scattering
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Absorption Much Light Energy is Absorbed (by Rocks, Water, Plants) It can be converted to other Forms of Energy: Kinetic Energy (energy of motion, e.g., wind) Potential Energy (e.g., chemical, gravitational; evaporation) Heat Energy (T is raised) Electromagnetic Radiation (ground, etc. re- radiates the energy towards space
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The Absorbed Heat Energy Can then Be Transferred Mechanisms of Heat Transfer:
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The Earth Emits Infrared Radiation in Response to its Temperature All substances emit radiation in response to their temperature. In general, hotter substances emit shorter wavelength radiation, and more radiation
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Greenhouse Effect: The Atmosphere Partially Blocks the escape of the emitted infrared radiation, keeping the Earth warmer. Absorption of visible light and infrared radiation by the atmosphere
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The Greenhouse Effect
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Reflection and Earth’s Albedo
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Chapter 2 END
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