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a2011065

Greenhouse Effect - Crystalinks - 0 views

  • The Natural Greenhouse Effect The earth receives an enormous amount of solar radiation. Just above the atmosphere, the solar power flux density averages about 1366 watts per square meter, or 1.740×1017 W over the entire Earth. This figure greatly exceeds the power generated by human activities. The difference between the natural greenhouse effect and global warming is that- global warming is anthropogenic whereas greenhouse effect is not. The solar power hitting Earth is balanced over time by an equal amount of power radiating from the Earth (as the amount of energy from the Sun that is stored is small). Almost all radiation leaving the Earth takes two forms: reflected solar radiation and thermal black body radiation. Reflected solar radiation accounts for 30% of the Earth's total radiation: on average, 6% of the incoming solar radiation is reflected by the atmosphere, 20% is reflected by clouds, and 4% is reflected by the surface. The remaining 70% of the incoming solar radiation is absorbed: 16% by the atmosphere (including the almost complete absorption of shortwave ultraviolet over most areas by the stratospheric ozone layer); 3% by clouds; and 51% by the land and oceans. This absorbed energy heats the atmosphere, oceans, and land and powers life on the planet. It should be noted that the surface of the Earth is in constant flux with daily, yearly and age long cycles and trends in temperature and other variables for a variety of causes; thus these percentages apply on average only. Like the Sun, the Earth is a thermal radiator. Because the Earth's surface is much cooler than the Sun (287 K vs 5780 K), Wien's displacement law dictates that Earth radiates its thermal energy at longer wavelengths than the Sun. While the Sun's radiation peaks at a visible wavelength of 500 nanometers, Earth's radiation peak is in the longwave (far) infrared at about 10 micrometres. The Earth's atmosphere is largely transparent at visible and near-infrared wavelengths, but not at 10 micrometres (this is, probably, not entirely coincidental: the transparency to "visible" wavelengths makes eyes adapted to seeing these wavelengths useful; and eye that could see in a strongly-absorbed wavelength would not be so useful). Only about 6% of the Earth's total radiation to space is direct thermal radiation from the surface. The atmosphere absorbs 71% of the surface thermal radiation before it can escape. The atmosphere itself behaves as a radiator in the far infrared, so it re-radiates this energy. The Earth's atmosphere and clouds therefore account for 91.4% of its longwave infrared radiation and 64% of Earth's total emissions at all wavelengths. The atmosphere and clouds get this energy from the solar energy they directly absorb; thermal radiation from the surface; and from heat brought up by convection and the condensation of water vapor. Because the atmosphere is such a good absorber of longwave infrared, it effectively forms a one-way blanket over Earth's surface. Visible and near-visible radiation from the Sun easily gets through, but thermal radiation from the surface can't easily get back out. In response, Earth's surface warms up. The power of the surface radiation increases by the Stefan-Boltzmann law until it (over time) compensates for the atmospheric absorption. Another, simpler, but essentially equivalent way of looking at this is that the surface is heated by two sources: direct solar radiation, and thermal radiation from the atmosphere; it is thus warmer than if heated by solar radiation alone. The result of the greenhouse effect is that average surface temperatures are considerably higher than they would otherwise be if the Earth's surface temperature were determined solely by the albedo and blackbody properties of the surface.
  • The greenhouse gases Water vapor (H2O) causes about 60% of Earth's naturally-occurring greenhouse effect. Other gases influencing the effect include carbon dioxide (CO2) (about 26%), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O) and ozone (O3) (about 8%). Collectively, these gases are known as greenhouse gases. The greenhouse effect due to carbon dioxide is specifically known as the Callendar effect.
  • There has been an observed global average temperature increase of about 0.5oC since 1960 (Science 308, 1431, 2005). There is still some public controversy about the role of human activities and that of CO2 and other greenhouse gas increases for global warming.
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  • The average surface temperature would be "-18ƒC if the atmosphere played no role. In reality this temperature is closer to 15ƒC above zero due to the combination of the greenhouse effect and the convective flow of heat energy within the atmosphere.
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    This page explains the natural Greenhouse effect and talks about radiation from Earth. It also includes the term albedo.
ttelesnicki3

Albedo - Encyclopedia of Earth - 0 views

  • Albedo is known as surface reflectivity of sun’s radiation. The term has its origins from a Latin word albus, meaning “white”. It is quantified as the proportion, or percentage of solar radiation of all wavelengths reflected by a body or surface to the amount incident upon it. An ideal white body has an albedo of 100% and an ideal black body, 0%. The typical amounts of solar radiation reflected from various objects are shown in Table 1. Albedo values can range between 3% for water at small zenith angles to over 95% for fresh snow. On average the Earth and its atmosphere typically reflect about 4% and 26%, respectively, of the sun’s incoming radiation back to space over the course of one year. As a result, the earth-atmosphere system has a combined albedo of about 30%, a number highly dependent on the local surface makeup, cover, and cloud distribution.
    • ttelesnicki3
       
      albedo: a percent that shows how much of the sunds radiation is reflected off an object white: 100% black: 0%
zacmah

Albedo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • The albedo of an object is the extent to which it reflects light, defined as the ratio of reflected to incident electromagnetic radiation.
    • ttelesnicki3
       
      this is a good definition for albedo...
  • In climatology it is sometimes expressed as a percentage
  • Albedos of typical materials in visible light range from up to 90% for fresh snow, to about 4% for charcoal, one of the darkest substances.
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    • zacmah
       
      ocean absorbs heat; when ice caps melt they increase the ocean's volume and warm the Earth.
  • a distance, the ocean surface has a low albedo, as do most forests,
  • The classic example of albedo effect is the snow-temperature feedback. If a snow covered area warms and the snow melts, the albedo decreases, more sunlight is absorbed, and the temperature tends to increase.
    • zacmah
       
      happening in the Arctic
  • Human activities have changed the albedo
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    this is a good definition
James Linzel

Climate Feedback: Tropics expanding fast - 0 views

  • boundaries of the tropics, defined by temperature, rainfall, wind, and ozone patterns, have shifted poleward by at least 2 degrees latitude in the last 25 years.
    • James Linzel
       
      Obviously you need to understand the term 'latitude' and 'poleward'.
  • It could be warming of the ocean surface, ozone depletion, El Nino changes, or climate change in the stratosphere (NOAA), among other ideas. In fact, the review's lead author "said this expansion may only be temporary, but there's no way of knowing yet"
  • As with ice melt, the long-term worst-case scenario includes an irreversible climate tipping point from altered ocean circulation.
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  • their poleward shift could lead to fundamental shifts in ecosystems and in human settlements.
  • Of particular concern are the semi-arid regions poleward of the subtropical dry belts, including the Mediterranean, the southwestern United States and northern Mexico, southern Australia, southern Africa, and parts of South America. A poleward expansion of the tropics is likely to bring even drier conditions to these heavily populated regions, but may bring increased moisture to other areas.
  • An increase in the width of the tropics could bring an increase in the area affected by tropical storms, or could change climatological tropical cyclone development regions and tracks.
a2011065

Global Warming - Crystalinks - 0 views

  • Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere The atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide and CH4 have increased by 31% and 149% respectively above pre-industrial levels since 1750. This is considerably higher than at any time during the last 650,000 years, the period for which reliable data has been extracted from ice cores. From less direct geological evidence it is believed that carbon dioxide values this high were last attained 40 million years ago. About three-quarters of the anthropogenic emissions of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere during the past 20 years is due to fossil fuel burning. The rest is predominantly due to land-use change, especially deforestation. The longest continuous instrumental measurement of carbon dioxide mixing ratios began in 1958 at Mauna Loa. Since then, the annually averaged value has increased monotonically from 315 ppmv as shown by the Keeling Curve. The concentration reached 376 ppmv in 2003. South Pole records show similar growth. The monthly measurements display small seasonal oscillations. Methane is produced biologically and released from gas pipelines. Some biological sources are "natural" such as termites and others are attributable to human activity such as agriculture, e.g., rice paddies. Recent evidence suggests that forests may also be a source (RC; BBC). Note that this is a contribution to the natural greenhouse effect, and not to the anthropogenic greenhouse effect (Ealert).
  • Adding carbon dioxide (CO2) or methane (CH4) to an atmosphere, with no other changes, will tend to make a planet's surface warmer; greenhouse gases create a natural greenhouse effect without which temperatures on Earth would be an estimated 30 °C lower, and the Earth uninhabitable.
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    Talks about Greenhouse gases and how they affect the atmosphere (carbon dioxide and methane)
sulaiman

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altitude - 0 views

  • Altitude is the elevation of a point or object from a known level or datum (plural: data).
  • True altitude is the elevation above mean sea level.
  • Absolute altitude is the height of the aircraft above the terrain over which it is flying.
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  • Indicated altitude is the reading on the altimeter.
  • Pressure altitude is the elevation above a standard datum plane
  • Density altitude is the altitude corrected for non-ISA International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) conditions at which the air density is unequal to ISA conditions.
  • The Earth's atmosphere is divided into several altitude regions:[4] Troposphere — surface to 5 miles (8 km) at poles – 11 miles (18 km) at equator), ending at the Tropopause. Stratosphere — Tropopause to 31 miles (50 km) Mesosphere — Stratopause to 53 miles (85 km) Thermosphere — Mesopause to 420 miles (675 km) Exosphere — Thermopause to 6200 miles (10,000 km)
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