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Teaching the Science of Climate Change. Keith Burrows AIP Education Committee STAVCON November 2007. This ppt available on www.vicphysics.org - Teachers. Please read the Notes pages for more info. A declaration of vested interests.
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Teaching the Science of Climate Change Keith Burrows AIP Education Committee STAVCON November 2007 This ppt available on www.vicphysics.org - Teachers Please read the Notes pages for more info
A declaration of vested interests • This presentation is dedicated to our wonderful grandchildren – and all the others who will inherit the results of our efforts in this decade – the last that has the option to act to avoid dangerous climate change.
Overview • Climate science • Earth’s energy balance • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere • The effect of changes in the system • Human induced changes • The release of millions of years of stored energy • Is the climate changing? • How can we understand it? • Climate models and their predictions. • What can we do? • Fossil fuels • Reduce energy use • Lower CO2 options • Sustainable options • The human response • Sceptics, deniers, avoiders • Change the light bulbs • The need for real change • Education • That’s where we come in
Climate science • Earth’s energy balance • The average temperature of the Earth is determined by the balance between incoming solar radiation and outgoing ‘heat’ radiation
Climate science • ~ 1/3 reflected • ~ 2/3 absorbed then re-radiated as IR emr. • 175,000 TW in • 175,000 TW out
Climate science • Earth’s energy balance • The average temperature of the Earth is determined by the balance between incoming solar radiation and outgoing ‘heat’ radiation • Not all the IR radiation from the surface escapes immediately... • or the average temperature would be about – 15ºC • and there would be much greater swings between night—day, cloud—no cloud
Climate science • Earth’s energy balance
Climate science • Earth’s energy balance • The average temperature of the Earth is determined by the balance between incoming solar radiation and outgoing ‘heat’ radiation • Not all the IR radiation from the surface escapes immediately... • or the average temperature would be about – 15ºC • and there would be much greater swings between night—day, cloud—no cloud • The Greenhouse effect: • Natural: • Water vapour • Carbon dioxide • Human produced: • Carbon dioxide • Methane etc.
Climate science • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere: EMR • Blackbody spectra. All objects at ANY temperature emit emr • Hot metal emits lots of shorter IR and some visible
Climate science • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere: EMR • Blackbody spectra. All objects at ANY temperature emit emr • Cold objects only long IR and no visible • Slightly shorter IR
Climate science • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere: EMR • Blackbody spectra • Spectra of stars • or anything else that hot – UV Vis IR –
Climate science • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere: EMR • Blackbody spectra • Sun and Earth but note that Earth is less than a millionth of the Sun – UV Vis short IR – long IR
Climate science • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere: EMR • Types of spectra • Blackbody continuous spectrum
Climate science • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere: EMR • Types of spectra • Emission line spectrum
Climate science • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere: EMR • Types of spectra This is what we are interested in.
Climate science • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere: EMR • First we need to know something about emr (light). • Quantum physics tells us that it comes as ‘photons’ • Here’s a red one • Here’s a violet one • Notice that the red one has a longer wavelength • It also has less energy • (Violet is more violent!)
Climate science • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere: EMR • First we need to know something about emr (light). • Quantum physics tells us that it comes as ‘photons’ • Here’s an ultraviolet (UV) one • Here’s an infrared (IR) one • Notice that the IR one has a longer wavelength again • It also has much less energy – • but it’s IR that is of interest to us
Climate science • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere: EMR • The gases in the atmosphere absorb, and then re-radiate some parts of the spectrum but not others. • The structure of the molecule determines what sort of energy is absorbed. • Oxygen and Nitrogen molecules are ‘tight’ and it takes a lot of energy to ‘shake’ them. • IR goes right past • High energy UV can give its energy to oxygen • but there’s very little of that even in sunlight
Climate science • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere: EMR • The gases in the atmosphere absorb, and then re-radiate some parts of the spectrum but not others. • The structure of the molecule determines what sort of energy is absorbed. • H2O and CO2 molecules (and other GHGs) are more ‘floppy’ • IR gives them energy • Which they re-radiate – in random directions • So some goes back down to Earth • keeping us warmer • The Greenhouse effect!
Climate science • The effect of changes • Remember we wouldn’t be here without it! • Water vapour is the main GHG • But what if we add more CO2?
Climate science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • More CO2→ more warmth → more H2O (evaporation) → more warmth → more H2O → more warmth → ??? • Water vapour goes in and out of the atmosphere very quickly • Carbon dioxide is there for ~ 100 years • That makes a big difference in the way they act • Adding H2O is not a problem.
Climatepseudo science “the combined effect of these greenhouse gases is to warm Earth's atmosphere by about 33 ºC, from a chilly -18 ºC in their absence to a pleasant +15 ºC in their presence. 95% (31.35 ºC) of this warming is produced by water vapour, which is far and away the most important greenhouse gas. The other trace gases contribute 5% (1.65 ºC) of the greenhouse warming, amongst which carbon dioxide corresponds to 3.65% (1.19 ºC). The human-caused contribution corresponds to about 3% of the total carbon dioxide in the present atmosphere, the great majority of which is derived from natural sources. Therefore, the probable effect of human-injected carbon dioxide is a miniscule 0.12% of the greenhouse warming, that is a temperature rise of 0.036 ºC. Put another way, 99.88% of the greenhouse effect has nothing to do with carbon dioxide emissions from human activity.” Prof. Bob Carter, Research Professor at James Cook University, palaeontologist, stratigrapher, marine geologist and environmental scientist. • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing
Climatepseudo science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • In short: • GHE → 31°C • H2O → 95% • OGHG → 5% of which CO2 → 3.6% • Human CO2 is 3% of CO2 so 0.1% of GHE • ie. 0.04°C No worries ☺
Climatepseudo science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • Sounds impressive – if only – but • www.realclimate.org A group of real climate scientists who try to help people like Carter – and us. RealClimate.org Gavin A. Schmidt: climate modeller at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies Dr. Michael E. Mann: Penn State University Departments of Meteorology and Geosciences and the Earth and Environmental Systems Institute, IPCC lead author Dr. Caspar Ammann: National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR). Dr. Rasmus E. Benestad: Norwegian project called RegClim, Norwegian Meteorological Institute Prof. Raymond S. Bradley: Director of the Climate System Research Center University of Massachusetts, Ray Bradley: Advisor to U.S., Swiss, Swedish, and U.K. National Science Foundations, NOAA, IPCC, IGBP, Stockholm. William M. Connolley: Climate modeller with the British Antarctic Survey. Prof. Stefan Rahmstorf: New Zealand Oceanographic Institute, Institute of Marine Science in Kiel, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, IPCC. Dr. Eric Steig: Isotope geochemist, University of Washington Dr. Thibault de Garidel: Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences at Rutgers University. Dr. David Archer: Computational ocean chemist at the University of Chicago.
Climatepseudo science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • 95% should actually be 90-95% and is for clouds also. • Can’t simply subtract leaving 5-10% for GHGs. • H2O and CO2 absorb different parts of the IR radiation.
Climatepseudo science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • Take away all H2O: OGHGs absorb ~34% • Take away OGHGs: H2O absorb ~85% • So effect of H2O ~ 66% – 85% • Not a linear problem! • So 5% for OGHGs should be ~ 15% – 34% • CO2 on its own 9% – 26% → ΔT ~ 3 to 9°C • (But that assumes Carter’s linearity which it isn’t)
Climatepseudo science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • Reminder – Carter’s figures: • GHE → 31°C • H2O → 95% • OGHG → 5% of which CO2 → 3.6% • Human CO2 is 3% of CO2 so 0.1% of GHE • ie. 0.04°C No worries ☺ ?
Climatepseudo science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • Anthropogenic CO2 is NOT 3%!
Climatepseudo science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • Anthropogenic CO2: 300 ppm → 380 ppm • Rise of 30% • linear extrapolation: AGHG → 1 to 2.6°C (AGHG = Anthropogenic GHGs)
Climate science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • Carter ignores complex mechanisms of the GHE. Assumes effects are linear – Just plain wrong. • Overlaps: gases absorb overlapping wavelengths. • Saturation: more gas makes no difference. • Feedback: Particularly important. Positive and negative. • Positive feedback:
Climate science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • Examples of feedback: • Increased water vapour → more clouds • reflect sunlight (negative feedback) • trap IR radiation (positive feedback)
Climate science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • Water vapour is a ‘feedback’ GHG • CO2, CH4, O3 etc are ‘forcing’ agents • They stay in the atmosphere whatever and ‘force’ more heat into the climate system. • Effect measured by ‘Radiative forcing constant’ • or: the extra heat flowing into (or out of) the climate system as a result of a change in some part of the system "The radiative forcing of the surface-troposphere system due to the perturbation in or the introduction of an agent (say, a change in greenhouse gas concentrations) is the change in net (down minus up) irradiance (solar plus long-wave; in Wm-2) at the tropopause AFTER allowing for stratospheric temperatures to readjust to radiative equilibrium, but with surface and tropospheric temperatures and state held fixed at the unperturbed values". (IPCC)
Climate science • The effect of changes – Feedback and Forcing • Computer models are the only way of taking all this into account – a little later.
Overview • Climate science • Earth’s energy balance • Interactions between emr and the atmosphere • The effect of changes in the system • Human induced changes • The release of millions of years of stored energy • Is the climate changing? • How can we understand it? • Climate models and their predictions. • What can we do? • Fossil fuels • Reduce energy use • Lower CO2 options • Sustainable options • The human response • Sceptics, deniers, avoiders • Change the light bulbs • The need for real change • Education • That’s where we come in
Human induced changes • The release of solar energy and carbon stored over 100 million years ...
Human induced changes • The release of solar energy and carbon stored over 100 million years in only 100’s of years We have to ask whether it might have an effect!
Human induced changes • Is the climate changing?
Human induced changes • Is the climate changing?
Human induced changes • Is the climate changing?
Human induced changes • Is the climate changing?
Human induced changes • We now know it has:
Human induced changes • Is the climate changing?
Human induced changes • Is the climate changing? IPCC SynRep
Human induced changes • Is the climate changing?
Human induced changes • How can we understand it? • It’s all a matter of physics!