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The Greenhouse Effect & Global Warming. Lecture 14: Atmospheres. Section 1: Measurements of the Temperature and CO 2 in the Earth’s atmosphere. Global Temperature: Past 130 years. Average Temperature during the 20 th Century.
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The Greenhouse Effect&Global Warming Lecture 14: Atmospheres Section 1: Measurements of the Temperature and CO2 in the Earth’s atmosphere.
Global Temperature: Past 130 years Average Temperature during the 20th Century
The Greenhouse Effect: Trapping IR Thermal Emissionfrom the planet Questions: • What is the greenhouse effect? • What is the cold evidence for Global Warming? • What different types of data indicate Global Warming • Is it good, bad, or both . . . • How would planets be different without the greenhouse effect? • Compare the greenhouse effect on Venus, Earth, and Mars.
Planet Earth: 4 Billion years of a stable environment
Charles Keeling 1958 Mauna Loa, Hawaii Develops technique for measuring carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
A reduction in carbon dioxide occurs every spring and summer each year as plant growth increased in the land-rich northern hemisphere, consuming CO2 by photosynthesis..
Arctic Ice:Storing CO2 for 400,000 Years Vostok ice core drilling site in Antarctica Snow falls year after year, forming stratified layers in ice. Trapped within these layers are small air bubbles that get trapped during snow falls. These air bubbles contain samples of atmospheric composition. Cutting an ice core to analyze the CO2 trapped inside.
CO2 Since the Year 1000 AD CO2 in atmosphere, measured in thick arctic ice.
Ice Cores:Deuterium and 18Oxygen isotopes Correlate with Air Temperature Change In 18O Fractional Increase in Deuterium Temperature (oC)
Temperature and CO2 concentration in the atmopshere During the past 400,000 years (from the Antarctic Ice cores) CO2 (ppm) TEMP (oC) Variations of deuterium (δD) in antarctic ice, which is a proxy for local temperature, and the atmospheric concentrations of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2). Note the correlation.
Earth’s Temperature Increased 0.9 C in the Atmosphere and Ocean since 1880.
Figure TS.6 Global Averaged Temperature Patterns of linear global temperature trends over the period 1979 to 2005 estimated at the surface (left), and for the troposphere from satellite records (right). Grey indicates areas with incomplete data. (Bottom) Annual global mean temperatures (black dots) with linear fits to the data. The left hand axis shows temperature anomalies relative to the 1961 to 1990 average and the right hand axis shows estimated actual temperatures, both in °C. Linear trends are shown for the last 25 (yellow), 50 (orange), 100 (magenta) and 150 years (red). The smooth blue curve shows decadal variations (see Appendix 3.A), with the decadal 90% error range shown as a pale blue band about that line. The total temperature increase from the period 1850 to 1899 to the period 2001 to 2005 is 0.76°C ± 0.19°C.
Increase in Temperature tracks Increase in Greenhouse Gases Since 1850: Atmospheric CO2 has increased by 25% Temperature vs Time Year 1850 2000
Carbon Dioxide:Humans are putting CO2into our Atmosphere Worldwide CO2 Production By fuel type: 1970 - 2020 Burning coal Gasoline Natural gas Fact, not speculation.
The Greenhouse Effect&Global Warming Lecture 13: Atmospheres Section 3: Glaciers are Retreating Feedback Mechanisms of the Greenhouse Effect Projections for the Future of our Atmosphere
1939 1951 • Franz Josef Glacier In Retreat 1964 1960
1941 Muir Glacier, Alaska 2004
Retreat of Glaciers 2006 1948 2002 Trift Glacier, Gadmental, Berner, Oberland Switzerland
1984 2002 Mt. Hood, Oregon
Easton Glacier A 2003 photograph of the ~2.9 square kilometer Easton Glacier on Mount Baker in Washington State. Between ~1890 and 1950, this glacier retreated ~2400 meters. It subsequently expanded 600 meters during a locally cold period between 1950 and 1979. Since then, it has again retreated 315 meters (as of 2002) with 150 meters lost solely between 1997 and 2002.[1]. The extent of the glacier in 1985 is indicated in the figure.
All survey regions except Scandinavia show a net thinning. This widespread glacier retreat is generally regarded as a sign of global warming. During this period, 83% of surveyed glaciers showed thinning with an average loss across all glaciers of 0.31 m/yr.
Retreating Glaciers Glacier Mass
The Greenhouse Effect&Global Warming Lecture 13: Atmospheres Section 2: The Physics of Infrared Absorption by Molecules
Earth Data: CO2 and Temperature Why is Temperature closely related to CO2 ?
n1symmetric O O C C n2 bending absorb 15 mm O O asymmetric absorb 4.3 mm O C O Vibrational Modes for CO2 Greenhouse effect caused by CO2: CO2 molecules absorb infrared light at specific wavelengths, trapping that energy in the Earth’s atmosphere.
O O O H O H H H C H N O N H nitrous oxide methane Other Greenhouse Gases ozone water These molecules in Earth’s atmosphere absorb IR light
Light Absorbed by the Atmosphere Absorption by gases In the Earth’s Atmosphere Absorptionin the Earth's atmosphere (middle panel) and the effect that this has on both solar radiation and upgoing thermal radiation (top panel). Individual absorption spectrum for major greenhouse gases plus Rayleigh scattering are shown in the lower panel. Both the Earth and the Sun shine by thermal emission of light. For the sun, these emissions peak in the visible region and correspond to a temperature of ~5500 K. Emissions from the Earth vary following variations in temperature across different locations and altitudes, but always peak in the infrared. The Earth has an average emission temperature of about 250 K (-20 C). The wavelengths of absorption bands are determined by the chemical properties of the gases present. Water vapor is the most significant of these greenhouse gases, followed by carbon dioxide. Percent Absorption
Absorption Transmission Peak thermal emission at T=300K Absorption by different molecules l = 0-15 µm CO2 Bending Mode
The Greenhouse Effect • Visible Sunlight passes through a planet’s atmosphere. • Some of this light is absorbed by the planet’s surface. • Planet warms. Emits its own light: “thermal radiation”, as infrared (IR) light - back out to space. • IR light is absorbed by the molecules and sent back to Earth ! • Result: the temperature is higher than if there were no atmosphere at all.
What Determines a Planet’s Surface Temperature? • Greenhouse Effect cannot change incoming Sunlight, so it cannot change the total energy returned to space. • it increases the energy (heat) trapped in lower atmosphere • it works like a blanket • In the absence of the Greenhouse Effect, what would determine a planet’s surface temperature? • the planet's distance from the Sun • the planet’s overall reflectivity, “albedo” (fraction reflected) • the higher the albedo, the less light absorbed, planet cooler • Earth’s average temperature would be –17º C (–1º F) without the Greenhouse Effect !
CO2 Levels are higher than in the past 400,000 years. Temperature rose 0.9 C since 1860. CO2 correlates with Temperature for 400,000 years. Data Data: CO2 and Temp. are Rising. Physics: Temp. Related to CO2, by the Greenhouse Effect. Global Warming Data and Physics.
Feedback: Declining Arctic IceCauses less reflectivity (Albedo)
Is the Sun to Blame ? No. Luminosity has been constant. (Solar max) Percentage change in monthly values of the total solar irradiance composites of Willson and Mordvinov (2003; WM2003, violet symbols and line) and Fröhlich and Lean (2004; FL2004, green solid line). • Sunlight hitting Earth: • 11 year Sunspot cycle • Offsets among instruments • No trend
Global Warming • Made a political issue by certain people. Three Facts are Absolute: • Earth has warmed by 0.5 C in past 50 years. Temperature rise greatest in past 10 years. • Humans are increasing by 30-50% the CO2 in the atmosphere. • Rising CO2 will cause rising temperatures Only Question: Not Whether, but by how much are humans contributing to Global Warming ?
Feedback Proceses:Positive and Negative Suppose Temp rises ==> Evaporation of ocean water. Feedback: • H2O is a greenhouse gas ==> Earth gets even Warmer ! • But clouds may form, increasing albedo. ==> Earth cools.
The Arctic:Positive Feedback Process • Temp rise causes polar cap ice to melt. • Artic ground exposed: dirt absorbs more sunlight (lower albedo). • Ground warms up more: Earth gets hotter. • More polar cap ice melts. Earth gets even hotter.
Consequences ofGlobal Warming • More evaporation of oceans: More storms, and more severe storms. • Water in oceans expand with rising Temp. Sea level has already risen 20 cm in past 100 years. Coastal regions and islands flood. • Polar caps and Glaciers melt: Causes rising ocean levels. • Change in ocean current patterns. Desserts may get rain; Farmland may get none.
Consequences ofGlobal Warming According to the UN report: The world will be a much hotter place by 2100. Coral reefs almost extinct In North America, a new dust-bowl brings deserts to life in the high plains states, centered on Nebraska, but also wipes out agriculture andcattle ranching as sand dunes appear across five US states, from Texas in the south to Montana in the north.Rising sea levels accelerate as the Greenland ice sheet tips into irreversible melt, submerging atoll nations and low-lying deltas. In Peru, disappearing Andean glaciers mean 10 million people face water shortages. Warming seas wipe out the Great Barrier Reef and make coral reefs virtually extinct throughout the tropics. Worldwide, a third of all species on the planet face extinction+3.4。: Rainforest turns to desert The Amazonian rainforest burns in a firestorm of catastrophic ferocity, covering South America with ash and smoke. Once the smoke clears, the interior of Brazil has become desert, and huge amounts of extra carbon have entered the atmosphere, further boosting global warming. The entire Arctic ice-cap disappears in the summer months, leaving the North Pole ice-free for the first time in 3 million years. Polar bears, walruses and ringed seals all go extinct. Water supplies run short in California as the Sierra Nevada snowpack melts away. Tens of millions are displaced as the Kalahari desert expands across southern Africa. Melting ice caps displace millions Rapidly-rising temperatures in the Arctic put Siberian permafrost in the melt zone, releasing vast quantities of methane and CO2. Global temperatures keep on rising rapidly in consequence. Melting ice-caps and sea level rises displace more than 100 million people, particularly in Bangladesh, the Nile Delta and Shanghai. Heatwaves and drought make much of the sub-tropics uninhabitable: large-scale migration even takes place within Europe, where deserts are growing in southern Spain, Italy and Greece. More than half of wild species are wiped out, in the worst mass extinction since the end of the dinosaurs. Agriculture collapses in Australia+5.4。: Sea levels rise by five metresThe West Antarctic ice sheet breaks up, eventually adding another five metres to global sea levels. If these temperatures are sustained, the entire planet will become ice-free, and sea
Predictions of temperatures next 100 years DEPENDS ON MAGNITUDE OF FEEDBACK AND RATE OF INCREASE OF GHG. IN 100 YEARS, FORCED CLIMATE CHANGE WILL MOST LIKELY EXCEED NATURAL VARIABILITY
The Greenhouse Effect&Global Warming Lecture 13: Atmospheres Section 4: Comparison of Atmospheres: Earth to Venus and Mars
Venus Earth Mars 0.7 AU 1 AU 1.5 AU 4.6 Billion Years Ago ... SUN (150 million km from Sun)
500 300 Temperature (Celsiu) 100 0 -100 Temperature: Top of Atmosphere decreases with distance from Sun 500 Earth -18oC (0oF) 400 300 Temperature (C) 200 Venus 100 5500 oC 0 Mars Distance From Sun -100 0 0
EARTH: Surface 15oC (60oF) Top of Atm: -18oC (0oF) 500 300 All three phases of water 100 Temperature (Celsius) 0 -100 Surface No Greenhouse Surface warmer than top of atm Greenhouse Effect Clue: atm composition
Climate History of Venus • Venus should have outgassed as much H2O as Earth. • Early on, when the Sun was dimmer, Venus may have had oceans of water • Venus’ proximity to the Sun caused all H2O to evaporate. • H2O caused runaway greenhouse effect • surface heated to extreme temperature • CO2 released from rocks: Adds to greenhouse effect • UV photons from Sun dissociate H2O; H2 escapes, O is stripped If Earth moved to Venus’ Orbit