1 / 69

Radiation Balance

Discover how radiation is transmitted, absorbed, and reflected in the atmosphere. Learn about the impact of albedo, scattering, and the intricate balance between incoming and outgoing radiation.

jeanettee
Download Presentation

Radiation Balance

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Radiation Balance

  2. In atmosphere, radiation can be… • transmitted • absorbed • reflected

  3. 1. transmission • Radiation passes through atmosphere unimpeded. • Shortwave and longwave “windows”

  4. 2. absorption • Energy is transferred to absorber; absorber emits energy • Energy emitted in photons (energy bundles). • Each level/orbit represents different amount of energy. • Atmospheric gases selectively absorb and emit only at certain wavelengths.

  5. 3. reflection • Energy re-directed; not absorbed • Our eyes detect reflected visible wavelengths. • Albedo is the reflective quality of a surface • Percent of incoming radiation reflected

  6. Earth’s average albedo, March

  7. Albedo is an important variable in global climate change • “A drop of as little as 0.01 in Earth’s albedo would have a major warming influence on climate—roughly equal to the effect of doubling the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which would cause Earth to retain an additional 3.4 Wm-2 ”.

  8. Clip about polar vortex

  9. Albedos of various surfaces: • Earth’s surface 0.31 (31%) • Cumulonimbus clouds 0.9 (90%) • Stratocumulus clouds 0.6 (60%) • Cirrus clouds 0.4 -0.5 (40 – 50%) • Fresh snow 0.8 – 0.9 (80 – 90%) • Melting snow 0.4 – 0.6 (40 – 60%) • Sand 0.3 – 0.35 (30 – 35%) • Grain crops 0.18 – 0.25 (18 – 25%) • Deciduous forest 0.15 – 0.18 (15 – 18%) • Coniferous forest 0.09 – 0.15 (9 – 15%) • Tropical rainforest 0.07 – 0.15 (7 – 15%) • Water bodies 0.06 – 0.10 (6 – 10%) increases at low sun angles

  10. Scattering / diffuse radiation • A form of reflection

  11. Types of scattering: • Rayleigh • Mie • Nonselective

  12. 1. Rayleigh • Happens when diameter of gas is < 1/10th diameter of wavelength of incoming radiation • favors smaller wavelengths • Scatters forward and back

  13. Optical path at point of tangency is 20 x as long as at SSP.

  14. 2. Mie • Caused by aerosols: • particles in atmosphere • microscopic but larger than gas molecules (pollen, dust, smoke, small water droplets ) • Scatter forward • Do not favor short wavelengths; scatter all visible wavelengths

  15. Pollution: high aerosol content Grey sky : aerosols scatter entire visible range towards surface

  16. 3. Nonselective • No wavelength preference; particles much larger than wavelength • Big water droplets; large dust particles • E.g., fog and clouds reflect all wavelengths of light, appear white or grey

  17. Radiation Balance • Balance maintained by earth and atmosphere between incoming and outgoing radiation. • Averaged over entire earth over entire year.

  18. “100%” incoming Imagine shortwave solar radiation entering the top of the atmosphere as total we start with. 70% is absorbed by earth/atmosphere 30% is reflected by earth/atmosphere (albedo = 30%)

  19. 70% absorbed by: • Ground (47%) • Gases, dust in atmosphere • Clouds 70% (23%) Shortwave!

  20. 30% reflected by • Ground (7%) • Clouds (17%) • Scattered by atmosphere (6%) 30% Albedo of earth/atmosphere = 30% Shortwave!

  21. 23 Shortwave absorption 47

  22. Earth absorbs far more solar radiation than atmosphere.

  23. Energy is transferred between atmosphere and earth. When Shortwave solar radiation is absorbed, longwave radiation is emitted. • Earth’s surface emits 116 % longwave !

  24. 116 units (%) of longwave emitted from earth surface to atmosphere 104absorbed by atmosphere 12 transmitted to space 12 Space 104 Atmosphere 116 Earth’s surface: ABSORBS SHORTWAVE, EMITS LONGWAVE Surface

  25. Longwave emission from earth 12 104 23 116 47

  26. Agents in atmosphere that absorb longwave : (clouds, water vapor, carbon dioxide, ozone, other greenhouse gases) Their energy level is raised; emit longwave 12 Space 104 Atmosphere 116 Earth’s surface: ABSORBS SHORTWAVE, EMITS LONGWAVE Surface

  27. Atmosphere (clouds, water vapor, greenhouse gases) absorb and emit longwave: 98 emitted back to earth 58 emitted to space 58 Space Atmosphere Surface 98 Notice: Amount re-emitted (98 + 58=156) exceeds amount absorbed (104)

  28. 12 Longwave emission from atmosphere 104 23 58 98 116 47

  29. Net radiation • Difference between amount emitted and amount absorbed. • Shortwave 1. For atmosphere: Net shortwave radiation = amount emitted ? None! amount absorbed ?

  30. 23 Shortwave absorption 47

  31. Net radiation • Difference between amount emitted and amount absorbed. • Shortwave 1. For atmosphere: Net shortwave radiation = amount emitted ? None! amount absorbed = 23 Net shortwave radiation for atmosphere = + 23

  32. Net radiation • Shortwave 2. For surface: Net shortwave radiation = amount emitted ? None! amount absorbed ?

  33. 23 Shortwave absorption 47

  34. Net radiation • Shortwave 2. For surface: Net shortwave radiation = amount emitted ? None! amount absorbed = 47 Net shortwave radiation for surface = + 47

  35. Net radiation B. Longwave 1. For atmosphere: Net longwave radiation = amount emitted ?

  36. 12 Longwave emission from atmosphere 104 23 58 98 116 47

  37. Net radiation • Difference between amount emitted and amount absorbed. B. Longwave 1. For atmosphere: Net longwave radiation = amount emitted : -58 + -98 = -156 amount absorbed ?

  38. Longwave emission from earth 12 104 23 116 47

  39. Net radiation • Difference between amount emitted and amount absorbed. B. Longwave 1. For atmosphere: Net longwave radiation = amount emitted : -58 + -98 = -156 amount absorbed : +104 Net longwave radiation for atmosphere = 104 – 156 = -52

  40. Net radiation B. Longwave 2. For surface: Net longwave radiation = amount emitted ?

More Related