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Lecture 3 read Hartmann Ch.2 and A&K Ch.2. Brief review of blackbody radiation Earth’s energy balance TOA: top-of-atmosphere Total flux in (solar or SW)= Total flux out (LW) Greenhouse effect The global energy balance Poleward energy flux. Earth’s energy balance - emission temperature.
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Lecture 3read Hartmann Ch.2 and A&K Ch.2 • Brief review of blackbody radiation • Earth’s energy balance TOA: top-of-atmosphere • Total flux in (solar or SW)= Total flux out (LW) • Greenhouse effect • The global energy balance • Poleward energy flux
Earth’s energy balance - emission temperature • Solar luminosity: energy flux from sun 3.9e26 W • Flux density a distance d away from sun S0= 1367 W/m2 d=1.5e11 m (Earth to sun) • Only area that the planet sweeps out of the beam may get absorbed (shadow area = pi x r2, area of sphere=4xpixr2) • Not all the energy that gets to TOA is absorbed, some gets reflected back to space (planetary albedo, alpha) • Absorbed solar radiation: S0(1-alpha) pi x r2 • The same amount must be returned to space by terrestrial radiation. • Emitted terrestrial radiation=sigma x T4 x 4 x pi x r2
Earth’s emission temperature It is the blackbody temperature with which it needs to emit in order to achieve energy balance Solar radiation absorbed = radiation emitted S0/4 (1-alpha) = sigma x T4 Earth’s T=255K = -18 deg C Global mean surface temperature = 288K =15deg Why the difference? Atmosphere is almost transparent to SW radiation but absorbs and emits IR ( or LW) radiation – greenhouse effect
Absorption of shortwave and longwave radiation by the atmosphereThe atmosphere is a highly selective absorber Note the Atmospheric window
The greenhouse effect • The atmosphere is rather transparent to solar radiation • It is efficient at absorbing longwave (terrestrial) radiation. When terrestrial radiation is absorbed in the atmosphere it then gets re-emitted, resulting in some of it heading back to the surface where it may be absorbed and re-radiated out……. • Let’s go to the board….
The Earth orbits the sun once per year with its axis of rotation tilted - seasons
The energy balance at TOA(Top of the atmosphere). The Heat Budget • There has to be a balance between the globally averaged solar radiation that is absorbed in the Earth system annually and the outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) emitted by the Earth system. Why? • Albedo is measured ASR (absorbed solar radiation) since total incoming solar is measured • OLR is measured.
Latitudinal heat balance • Averaged over the year, latitudes equatorward of ~36 deg latitude receive more solar radiation than they lose in the form of terrestrial radiation. The opposite is true poleward of ~36 deg. • Are the tropics getting hotter, the poles getting colder? • The atmosphere and ocean transport energy poleward.
Poleward energy transport • Albedo increases with latitude because solar zenith angle, cloud cover and snow cover increase • OLR does not decrease with latitude as rapidly as the ASR • Atmosphere & ocean transport heat poleward to make up for the difference
Planetary albedo • Annual mean • JJA • DJF
Outgoing long- • Wave radiation • (OLR) • Annual mean • JJA • DJF
Net incoming radiation • at the TOA • Annual mean • JJA • DJF