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Greenhouse Effect
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Thermal radiation Objects emit electromagnetic radiation –The hotter they are, the faster the energy output ( T 4 ) –The hotter they are, the shorter the wavelength Sun: mostly emits visible (short-wave) Earth: mostly emits infrared (IR) N 2, O 2 don’t readily absorb IR
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Surface Temp – No Atmosphere Solar output Insolation Albedo Surface Temperature Longwave radiation
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Planet with No Atmosphere Solar energy input IR output to space Temperature rises if input > output Output rises as temperature rises Temperature steady when input = output Surface energy changes with absorption and radiation
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Add CO 2 Solar output Insolation Albedo Surface Temperature Longwave radiation CO 2 Atmospheric IR radiation Net effect: surface temp increase
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Why CO 2 ? Gases with more than 3 atoms strongly absorb and emit long-wave IR –Water (H 2 O) thermally controlled –Carbon Dioxide (CO 2 ) residence time ~ 100 yr –Methane (CH 4 ) reacts with oxygen
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Planetary Greenhouses Venus: + 523 ° C Earth: + 35 ° C Mars: + 1 ° C
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When It Matters Most When/where surface cools radiatively –At night –In the winter –Near the poles
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Geologic Factors Land distribution (polar land holds snow) Silicate weathering (consumes CO 2 ) Uplift (exposes weatherable rocks) Tectonic Volcanism: CO 2 emissions
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Orbital Factors Lower axial tilt warmer winters, cooler summers more winter snow, less summer melt Less eccentricity less annual insolation
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Past Climate Swings Little Ice Age: sunspot minimum? Pliocene/Pleistocene ice ages: orbital cycles Archaean “Snowball Earth” –initiation: CH 4 consumed by biogenic O 2 –ending: volcanic CO 2 accumulation Warm Carboniferous: CO 2 depleted by coal accumulation, triggering Permian glaciations Warm Mesozoic: high seafloor spreading Cool late Cenozoic: Tethys collisions
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Feedback Activity Predict effects of changes Add to feedback diagram Predict effect on surface temperature Solar output Insolation Albedo Surface Temperature Longwave radiation CO 2
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Select Evidence there’s lots
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Mauna Loa CO 2 Record Pre-industrial level Source: U.N. Environmental Programme
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Ice Core CO 2 and Temperature Kurt M. Cuffey and Françoise Vimeux, Nature 412, 523- 527(2 August 2001)
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Past CO 2 levels Curve: Keeling, C.D. and T.P. Whorf. 2004. In Trends: A Compendium of Data on Global Change. Oak Ridge, TN: Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center.
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Hockey Stick Curve Science, 307, 828 (11 Feb 2005).
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Lines of Evidence Radiation physics Climate modeling Paleoclimate records Geographic warming pattern Sea surface temperature, sea level Ice retreat
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Sources of Greenhouse Gases Volcanoes Fires Methane-producing organisms Fossil fuel burning Release of CO 2 from warming oceans Methane from permafrost thawing
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Human Impact Trends Energy, food demand increasing Coastal populations increasing disproportionately CO 2 emission rise exceeded projections
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Future Climate Predictions Decreased snow pack freshwater Longer growing season decreased sea ice Sea-level rise Warmer ocean Tropical and mid-latitude cyclones
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Human Impact Predictions Coastal flooding Freshwater supplies Heat waves and droughts Tropical diseases Insect impacts
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Mitigation Carbon-neutral energy –CO 2 sequestration –biomass –solar, wind, geothermal –nuclear Conservation and efficiency Cost accounting –carbon tax –cap/trade
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