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Solar & Terrestrial Radiation. The Electromagnetic Spectrum. Energy travel as waves and particles Energy is the capacity to do work E=MC 2 Where E is energy, M is mass and C is the speed of light (300,000km/sec) Energy has electrical AND magnetic properties
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The Electromagnetic Spectrum • Energy travel as waves and particles • Energy is the capacity to do work • E=MC2 • Where E is energy, M is mass and C is the speed of light (300,000km/sec) • Energy has electrical AND magnetic properties • ALL object ABSORB and EMIT EM radiation
EM Radiation • Described in terms of Wavelength or Frequency • Wavelength distance between successive crests or troughs in km, m, mm, mm • Frequency # wave crest/time (1sec) cycles/sec or Hertz (Hz) • The longer the Wavelength (l) the lower the frequency • Frequency is inversely proportional to l, so the higher the frequency the shorter the l
There is a simple relationship between the wavelength (l), frequency (n), and velocity (c). If you know any 2 of them then you can compute the 3rd using c = l n or, velocity (c) equals wavelength (l) times frequency (n).
EM Radiation • Travel through space • In a vacuum travel at the speed of light • Pass through liquids, solids, gases • EM radiation can be reflected, refracted when crossing different mediums as well as absorbed • Solar radiation arrives on Earth primarily as visible (0.4-0.7 mm) and Ultra-violet and is reflected and absorb and re-radiated to space as visible and Infra-red (heat)
Radiation Laws • Perfect radiator- blackbody • Blackbody- at a constant temperature absorbs ALL radiation that is incident on it and EMITS all radiant energy it absorbs • All known objects emit and absorb all forms of EM radiation • The l of most intense radiation (lmax) emitted by a blackbody is inversely proportional to absolute T of the object • lmax=C/T where C is 2897 if l is in mm and T is in K, where absolute zero is -273.15oC • This is a statement of Wien’s Displacement Law
Wien’s Displacement Law • Hot objects (stars) emit radiation that peaks at relatively short wavelength • The blackbody temperature is 6000K • For the Sun it is about 0.5mm • Cold objects (planets, like the Earth-atmosphere system) emit peak radiation at longer wavelengths • The blackbody temperature is 288K (15oC) • For the Earth it is about 10mm
Stefen-Boltzmann Law • The total energy flux emitted by a blackbody across all wavelengths (E) is proportional to the fourth power of the absolute temperature (T4) of the object • E~T4 • A small change in temperature results in a greater change in radiational energy emitted • Since the sun radiates at a greater temperature than the Earth the law predicts that the energy output per square meter of the sun will be 190,000 times greater than the earth
Input of Solar Radiation • Stellar nuclear synthesis • 80%hydrogen • Hydrogen fusion alpha particle Helium • Internal temperature 20 million oC • Photosphere- Visible solar surface 6,000oC • Sunspots- cool areas of the sun’s surface • Chromosphere- outward area, ions of H+ He+ 4,000-40,000 oC • Solar corona- highest level of solar atmosphere, ionized gases, extending millions of kilometers into space, where solar wind originates
Solar Altitude • Intensity of solar radiation varies with latitude • Intensity of solar radiation varies with time of day • Intensity of solar radiation varies with path through atmosphere gases
TEMPERATE POLAR TROPIC
Earth’s Motions in Space and the Seasons • Rotation on its axis every 24hrs (day) • Revolution around the sun every 365.2422 days elliptical orbit (year) • Closest 3 January (perihelion) farthest 4 July (aphelion), Earth receives 6.7% more radiation at perihelion than aphelion • Earth’s tilt at 23.5o • Summer & Winter Solstice • Tropic of Cancer & Tropic of Capricorn • Equinoxes (March & September)
Solar Radiation & The Atmosphere • Solar radiation interacts with gases and aerosols • Scattering & reflection (albedo), absorption (absorptivity) or transmissivity (amount that reaches earth’s surface) of solar radiation must equal 100% • In scattering a particle disperses solar radiation in all directions • Scattering by molecules is wavelength dependent and preferential scattering of blue-violet light by N2 and O2 is the reason for the daytime sky • Water and ice scatter visible light equally at all wavelengths so that clouds appear white
Albedo • Fraction of total radiation reflected by an object (surface). • Varies according to: • Cloud cover. • Particles in air. • Angle of sun’s rays. • Types of surface.
Stratospheric Ozone • Ozone is a gas made up of three oxygen atoms (O3). • Ozone is destroyed when it reacts with molecules containing nitrogen, hydrogen, chlorine, or bromine. (CFCs) • Ozone protects life on Earth from the Sun’s ultraviolet (UV) radiation. • Ozone screens all of the most energetic, UV-c, radiation, and most of the UV-b radiation. • Ozone only screens about half of the UV-a radiation. Excessive UV-b and UV-a radiation can cause sunburn and can lead to skin cancer and eye damage. • In the lower atmosphere (the troposphere) near the Earth’s surface, ozone is created by chemical reactions between air pollutants from vehicle exhaust, gasoline vapors, and other emissions. • At ground level, high concentrations of ozone are toxic to people and plants.
The Ozone Layer • The depletion of the ozone (O3) layer was first reported in 1985 by British scientists who said the amount of ozone had been decreasing over Antarctica since the late 1970s • Depletion of the ozone layer over the poles is most severe in the winter months • The greatest loss is over Antarctica because Antarctic winters are colder than Arctic winters • The ozone hole grew to its largest recorded size in 2000, expanding to an area roughly three times the size of the United States • Satellites carrying total ozone mapping spectrometers (TOMS) have been used to map the zone since 1978
Map of ozone over Antarctica (1997) in Dobson units [0.01mm thickness of ozone at standard P & T (0oC and 1 atm)]
Ozone Problem • Decreased levels of ozone in the atmosphere will allow more ultraviolet radiation to reach the surface • A 50% decrease in ozone is estimated to cause a 350% increase in ultraviolet radiation reaching the surface • Ultraviolet radiation is known to adversely affect growth and reproduction in organisms and is thought to increase the risk of skin cancer and cataracts • Research also indicates that increased ultraviolet light may decrease rates of photosynthesis and growth in marine plants, phytoplankton, by about 2–4% under the Antarctic ozone hole
OZONE • Thanks to the UN Montreal Protocol • The production and consumption of entire groups of harmful ozone-depleting chemicals has been successfully phased out in developed countries, and the same process is now well under way in developing countries. • Overall, almost ninety five per cent of all ozone-depleting substances have been phased out
After 20 years of protecting the ozone layer with a new generation of chemicals, governments are now having to confront the fact that these ozone-friendly substitutes for chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) also happen to be greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming.
Intensity of solar radiation • The Earth receives solar radiation unequally over its surface • The intensity per unit area of surface is greatest at the equator • Intermediate in the middle latitudes • The lowest intensity is at the polar regions
Global Solar Radiation Budget • Reflected 31% • Absorbed by atmosphere 20% • Absorbed by Earth’s surface 49% • Earth’s climate is controlled by a Greenhouse Effect • Gases in the atmosphere control this effect • H2Ovapor, CO2, O3, CH4, N2O • The percent of IR radiation absorbed varies with l • An Atmospheric Window is a range of l over which little or no radiation is absorbed • A visible window extends 0.3-0.9mm and major IR 8-13 mm, the peak IR emission of the planet is at 10mm
Greenhouse Gases • CO2 is stored in four reservoirs: three that are active and one inactive reservoir including • the atmosphere, • the oceans, • the terrestrial system • Earth’s crust • Most CO2 is stored in the oceans while the smallest amount is found in the atmosphere. • Short-wavelength incoming radiation is not blocked by CO2, but re-radiated long-wavelength energy is, and this warms the atmosphere causing the greenhouse effect
Greenhouse Gases • Changing atmospheric chemistry can be monitored for past years by analyzing bubbles trapped in polar ice. • It can be demonstrated that following the Industrial Revolution, the concentration of CO2 has risen dramatically and continues to rise at an increasing rate. • The concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere has increased from 280 ppm to 380 ppm since 1850 • Currently, the average increase in concentration is about 1.4 ppm per year
Past Climate in Ice • Polar ice sheets (Greenland and Antarctica) • Ice cores preserve a detail make up of the ocean and atmosphere • Trapped bubbles contain gases from the past • GRIP (Greenland Ice Core Project) drilled a core 3029m a record of more than 200,000 yrs • Identify volcanic events, lead production, large scale pollution • Pre and post industrial revolution levels of sulfate (3X) and nitrate (2X) • Russian core at Vostok (3623m ~ 450,000 yrs) • CO2 increased 140K and decreased 100K; 10K increase by 40%
CO2 • Scientists have estimated that the greenhouse effect may produce a global warming of 2–4°C over the next hundred years. • This could melt high latitude ice and raise sea level by as much as 1 m by the year 2100. • Careful measurements of short term increases in global temperatures have shown a twenty year warming period which began in 1920 and another period of warming that began in 1977 and continued through the 1980s
CO2 • There is considerable debate over the actual cause or causes of the observed global warming and different mechanisms have been proposed to explain it including: • increasing levels of CO2, • variations in sun spot cycles, and • changing concentrations of dust particles in the air
CO2 • Some natural processes actually lead to global cooling. Massive volcanic eruptions can release enough ash to the air to block incoming solar radiation and cool the planet for a period of time • The use of fossil fuels and the burning of tropical forests produces about 7 billion tons of CO2 annually. • Roughly 3 billion tons are stored in the atmosphere, another 2 billion tons enters the oceans and ocean sediments • At least 1 billion tons are taken up by plants in the re-growth of logged forests
FUTURE • Sharp reduction in coal & oil consumption • Greater reliance Non fossil fuel energy resources • Higher energy efficiencies • Halt deforestation
Monitoring Radiation • Pyranometer measures solar radiation striking horizontal surface • Transmits total (direct plus diffuse) short wave (< 3.0mm) radiation • Black and white surfaces (differences in absorptivity and albedo) mean a different temperature response (W/m2) • Infrared Radiometer measures IR emitted by objects
Solar Power • Solar power is a clean, reliable form of renewable energy generated by converting energy from the sun's radiation into electricity • Solar cells, also referred to as photovoltaic (PV) cells are grouped and connected together in a single frame called a panel or module • These cells are comprised of special semi-conductive materials, which is most often a piece of silicon positioned under a layer of thin glass
The world's largest solar electric power plantThe Gut Erlasee Solar Park, a 12-megawatt facility Located near the Bavarian town of Arnstein, Germany