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Heat Energy Solar and gravitational energy are the fundamental sources of energy for the Earth's climate system. Air-sea exchanges of heat (& freshwater) change density and drive circulation. - heat source into the ocean is solar radiation - heat lost from the ocean by: - latent heat (evaporation) - conduction (sensible) - longwave radiation - reflected solar - ocean circulation moves (transports) heat Geography 104 - “Physical Geography of the World’s Oceans”
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heat into top of atmosphere = 100% Earth’s heating: incoming shortwave solar radiation
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heat out of top of atmosphere = 100% Earth’s cooling: reflected solar radiation, longwave, latent, and sensible heat
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atmosphere’s heat budget by % heat into atmosphere = 60%; 37% from land & ocean
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atmosphere’s heat budget by % heat into atmosphere = 60%; 37% from land & ocean heat out of atmosphere = 60%
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Earth’s heat budget (W m -2 ) Qsw = Qlw + Qlat + Qsens 168 W m -2 = 66 W m -2 + 78 W m -2 + 24 W m -2 in balance; no net heating or cooling
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Earth’s heat budget (W m -2 ) Longwave radiation: Earth’s surface atmosphere = 350 W m -2 Atmosphere Earth’s surface = 324 W m -2 26 W m -2 heats atmosphere
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ocean’s heat budget
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ocean’s heat budget by % Qsw = Qlw + Qlat + Qsens 100% = 41% + 53% + 6% on average no net heating or cooling
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electromagnetic spectrum units 1 nm = 10 -9 m EMR exhibits wave- like and particle-like properties. Indivisible particles of light are defined as photons.
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blackbody radiation – blackbody is a perfect emitter and absorber of radiation (i.e. appears black). Blackbodies emit at all λ’s. However, λ of maximum emission is inversely proportional to temperature. higher T lower λ peak Wien’s law: λ max ~ 1 / T Stefan-Boltzmann formula: total energy emitted ~ T 4 288 K Earth
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atmosphere is largely transparent in visible atmosphere absorbs in IR vis IR
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- the atmosphere absorbs little (~5%) radiation in visible wavelengths -water vapor, CO2, methane, ozone, CFC’s, (and other greenhouse gases) absorb some of the infrared radiation emitted by the earth -with no greenhouse effect, Earth’s surface would average a frigid -18°C (0°F) -water vapor, clouds, and CO2 (in that order) produce the most greenhouse warming, raising Earth’s mean surface temperature to 15°C (59°F)
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changes in overhead position of sun cause variations in Earth’s solar heating
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changing solar incidence angle sun overhead at Tropic of Capricorn on summer solstice in southern hemisphere 24-hour sunlight south of Antarctic circle
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changing solar incidence angle sun overhead at Tropic of Cancer on summer solstice in northern hemisphere 24-hour sunlight north of Arctic circle
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changing solar incidence angle solar radiation spread over larger area at high latitude
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changing solar incidence angle more reflection at high latitudes longer path through atmosphere at high latitudes Earth’s radius = 6371 km atmosphere’s thickness ~100 km so figure not to scale
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solar radiation at Earth’s surface (W m -2 )
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solar radiation directly heats water beneath the sea surface UV IR ~50% of solar energy attenuated in top 1 m
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Most solar energy quickly “attenuated” by seawater and converted to heat. Some wavelengths can penetrate to depths of 100m
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seawater and things in it alter the spectral shape of the solar field (“bio-optics”) seawater and things in it have fairly unique light absorbing and scattering properties solar radiation can be back-scattered to space
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SeaWiFS ocean color data El Nino: low chlorophyll La Nina: high chlorophyll
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heat loss terms - latent heat flux (Q lat ) energy required to change state (evaporate) of water most important in tropics & midlatitudes - longwave radiation (Q lw ) net thermal IR emission from ocean - sensible heat flux (Q sen ) transfer from high to low temp. to equalize difference typically small
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latent heat evaporation process needs energy to overcome molecular forces of attraction between water particles; this input of heat energy causes a drop in ocean temperature
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2. / latent heat Figure 7-11 in text; another error 3. / 0. Energy to heat 1 gm ice by 1 °C = 2.05 J/g
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latent heat loss
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longwave heat loss
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sensible heat loss
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net ocean heat gain or loss (“net surface heat flux”)
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net ocean heat gain or loss (“net surface heat flux”)
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poleward heat transport via ocean & atmosphere heat gain & loss vs. latitude temperature of oceans ~ constant distribution of heat changes
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Global Heat Budget
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surface warming decreases density (thus stratifies) surface cooling increases density (thus destratifies)
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Readings (Earth’s heat budget): Text Chapter 7 (pgs 126 – 134) Reader pgs. 189 – 198 Readings (Ocean and Atmosphere): Text Chapter 8 (pgs 138 – 147) Reader pgs. 51 – 61 HW #2 assigned; Due Friday 31 Oct 2008 Midterm on Wednesday 5 Nov 2008
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