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Biosphere/Atmosphere Interactions Biology 164/264. 2007 Joe Berry joeberry@globalecology.stanford.edu Chris Field cfield@globalecology.stanford.edu Adam Wolf adamwolf@stanford.edu. Basic questions to be addressed by this course:.
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Biosphere/Atmosphere InteractionsBiology 164/264 2007 Joe Berry joeberry@globalecology.stanford.edu Chris Field cfield@globalecology.stanford.edu Adam Wolf adamwolf@stanford.edu
Basic questions to be addressed by this course: • What are the major fluxes of energy and matter between the atmosphere and land ecosystems? • What determines the temperature of leaves, plants, soils, and ecosystems? • What controls rates of plant photosynthesis and transpiration? • How do atmospheric processes interact with ecosystem processes to control CO2 and water exchanges? • How do characteristics of the land surface influence the motions of the atmosphere? • How do characteristics of the land surface influence climate? • How do greenhouse gases exchanged by ecosystems influence climate? • How can we measure and model the exchanges of matter and energy from the leaf to the global scale?
Mechanics • 2 lectures per week – TTh 11-11:50 • Bio T 185 • 1 lab per week – Tuesday 2-5 • Carnegie Global Ecology (260 Panama Street) • 1 optional Matlab/problem session – Thursday 4-6 • Carnegie Global Ecology (260 Panama Street) • Grading: • Bio 164: • Weekly problem/program 60% • Final project data analysis 20% • Class participation 10% • Labs (weekly data sets) 10% • Bio 264: • Weekly problem/program 40% • Final integrated program 20% • Final project data analysis 20% • Class participation 10% • Labs (weekly data sets) 10% • Problem/programs in Matlab • No midterm, no final, no papers
Labs • January 16 • Principles of environmental sensors & data loggers • Radiation sensors • January 23 • Environmental sensors – wind, humidity, soil moisture, water potential • January 30 • Environmental sensors – CO2, water vapor • February 6 • Leaf gas exchange • February 13 • Leaves – fluorescence, spectral reflectance, isotope exchange • February 20 • Canopy gas exchange – eddy flux hardware • February 27 • Canopy gas exchange – environmental conditions at an eddy flux installation • March 6 • Canopy gas exchange – vegetation status and fluxes at an eddy flux installation • March 13 • Canopy gas exchange – setting up an eddy flux system • For each lab, each pair will be responsible for collecting, analyzing, and turning in a data set collected from at least one sensor or system
Texts • Campbell, G. S. and J. M. Norman. 1998. An Introduction to Environmental Biophysics. Springer, New York. 286 pp. (core) • Hartmann, D. L. 1994. Global Physical Climatology. Academic Press, San Diego. 411 pp. (optional) • Stull, R. B. 2000. Meteorology for Scientists and Engineers. Brooks Cole, Pacific Grove. 503 pp. (optional) • Bonan, G. B. 2002. Ecological climatology: Concepts and applications. Cambridge University Press, New York. 678 pp. (optional)
What controls the temperature of the planet? Heat-trapping or greenhouse gases trap thermal radiation on its way to space. Energy in = Energy out + storage
What controls rates of photosynthesis? Annual weeds Deciduous trees Photosynthetic capacity Evergreen sclerophylls Leaf nitrogen
Radiation • All objects at temperatures above absolute zero emit radiation. • Photons carry a unique amount of energy that depends on wavelength • E = hc/l • Where h is Planck’s constant (6.63*10-34 Js), c is the speed of light (3*1010m s-1), and l is wavelength (m).
Thermal Radiation • Stephan-Boltzmann Law • s = 5.67 * 10-8 W m-2 K-4 • Earth approximates a black body at 288 K -- Emits 390 W m-2 • Black body = emissivity () = 1 • Note: the emissivity of plants is close to 1, but other objects can have very different values
Absorptance and Emissivity • Absorbed radition is proportional to absorptance • Emitted radiation in proportional to emissivity = absorptance
Blackbody radiation • Amount increases with T4 • Wavelength of maximum proportional to 1/T
Wien Law • objects at 300k maximum emission at about 10 micrometers
Solar energy • Solar output 3.84*1034 W • extra-atmosphere – the sun is close to a 5760 K black body • radiant emittance = 6.244*107 W m-2 • most of the solar energy is in the range of 0.3 – 2.5 micrometers • about 50% is visible (0.4 – 0.7m) and about 50% is infrared (> 0.7m) • The solar (not so) constant • Integrating this emittance over the size of the sun and the distance to the earth leads to a radiation at the outside of the atmosphere of 1360 W m-2 • Integrating over the spherical surface leads to an average radiation of about 342 W m-2
Atmospheric transmission • Absorption • Average absorption by the atmosphere 62 W m-2 • Scattering • Raleigh (small particle) – shortest wavelengths scattered preferentially out of the solar beam • Mie (large particle) – little wavelength dependence • Average reflected solar radiation by the atmosphere 77 W m-2 • Effects of clouds • Scattering and reflectance • The greenhouse effect • Increased absorptance of thermal radiation means increased radiation directed back to the surface • Increased absorptance in the atm effectively increases the height at which the atmosphere is radiating back to space