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greenhouse gases

the greenhouse effect

  • when visible light is absorbed by the earth’s surface, it is reradiated in the form of heat

    • this heat is trapped in the lower atmosphere by several gases and then reradiated back to earth

  • carbon dioxide (CO2) is the most prevalent greenhouse gas

    • it is being added to the atmosphere much faster than it is being removed

  • other greenhouse gases

    • methane (CH4, “natural gas”) is naturally present in bogs, rice paddies, landfills, and released from the digestive systems of animals like cattle

      • traps much more heat than CO2

      • leveled have doubled since pre-industrial revolution times

    • nitrous oxides (NOx) come from manure, burning fossil fuels, fertilizers, industrial work, cars

    • fluorinated gases

      • CFCs

      • HFCs

      • halons

    • water vapor varies greatly from day to day but has not increased much over the past 10,000 years

changes in greenhouse gas concentrations

the greenhouse effect

  • climate: an area’s long-term atmospheric conditions

    • eg. temperature, precipitation, atmospheric pressure, wind

    • different from weather

    • weather: the conditions of the atmosphere over a short period of time

  • earth’s energy budget

    • the climate is influenced by solar radiation

    • ~70% of solar radiation is absorbed by the troposphere and the earth’s surface

    • visible light and infrared radiation

  • electromagnetic spectrum: the range of wavelengths of electromagnetic energy

  • the greenhouse effect

    • greenhouse effect: when visible light is absorbed by the earth’s surface, it is reradiated in the form of heat; that heat is trapped in the lower atmosphere by several gases and then reradiated back to earth

    • the greenhouse effect is natural, we’ve known about it since about the mid-1800’s, and it is critical to the temperature on earth which allows humans to live and function as we do

  • atmospheric levels of CO2

    • in the early 1900s, Svante Arrhenius predicted that the increasing amount of CO2 being released would warm the planet

    • in 1958, Charles David Keeling took the first measurement of atmospheric CO2 levels

      • daily measurements have been taken since then at a weather station in Mauna Kea, Hawaii

      • the keeling curve

  • global temperatures have risen

changes in the atmosphere

measuring temperature

  • thermometers were invented in the 17th century

  • satellites measure infrared radiation emitted from the sea surface

proxies for temperature

  • proxy: a figure that can be used to represent the value of something in a calculation

  • O2 isotopes in water

  • density of tree rings — gives information on temperature in precipitation

ice core analysis

  • ice core — ”frozen time capsules”

  • oldest records extend 130,000 years back in Greenland, 800,000 years in Antarctica

  • ice layers hold particles and contain tiny bubbles of atmospheric air (fossil air pockets)

the CO2 increase

  • CO2 levels vary naturally but natural variations cannot explain the recent spike in CO2 concentration

  • climate change

    • the greenhouse effect is a natural phenomenon that keeps the earth warm

    • human (anthropogenic) activities are responsible for the increase in release of greenhouse gases

    • because of higher concentrations of greenhouse gases, the global temperature is increasing

climate models and predictions

  • the keeling curve

    • we cannot just extrapolate the keeling curve because there are other greenhouse gases whose concentrations are changing and the oceans will remain warm for a while

  • feedback mechanisms

    • positive feedback mechanisms

      • reinforce and amplify ongoing trends

      • eg. higher temperature → more water evaporation → more water vapor in the atmosphere → water vapor is a greenhouse gas → higher temperature

    • negative feedback mechanisms

      • diminish or reverse a particular trend and maintain the initial conditions

      • eg. higher temperature → more water evaporation → more water vapor in the atmosphere → more clouds → more reflection of sunlight → less sunlight reaching the surface → lower temperatures (cooling)

climate models

  • computational devices for solving large sets of equations

  • not perfect, but can be tested against reality over time

  • create possible “scenarios,” some more optimistic than others

  • in the context of the climate, scenarios are called representative concentration pathways (RPCs)

  • climate scenarios

tipping points

  • tipping point: the critical point in a situation, process, or system beyond which a significant and often unstoppable effect or change takes place

  • we are currently on the brink of five disastrous climate tipping points

  • spurious correlation: a false correlation or fallacy; an attempt to draw a correlation between two things which are not related

R

greenhouse gases

the greenhouse effect

  • when visible light is absorbed by the earth’s surface, it is reradiated in the form of heat

    • this heat is trapped in the lower atmosphere by several gases and then reradiated back to earth

  • carbon dioxide (CO2) is the most prevalent greenhouse gas

    • it is being added to the atmosphere much faster than it is being removed

  • other greenhouse gases

    • methane (CH4, “natural gas”) is naturally present in bogs, rice paddies, landfills, and released from the digestive systems of animals like cattle

      • traps much more heat than CO2

      • leveled have doubled since pre-industrial revolution times

    • nitrous oxides (NOx) come from manure, burning fossil fuels, fertilizers, industrial work, cars

    • fluorinated gases

      • CFCs

      • HFCs

      • halons

    • water vapor varies greatly from day to day but has not increased much over the past 10,000 years

changes in greenhouse gas concentrations

the greenhouse effect

  • climate: an area’s long-term atmospheric conditions

    • eg. temperature, precipitation, atmospheric pressure, wind

    • different from weather

    • weather: the conditions of the atmosphere over a short period of time

  • earth’s energy budget

    • the climate is influenced by solar radiation

    • ~70% of solar radiation is absorbed by the troposphere and the earth’s surface

    • visible light and infrared radiation

  • electromagnetic spectrum: the range of wavelengths of electromagnetic energy

  • the greenhouse effect

    • greenhouse effect: when visible light is absorbed by the earth’s surface, it is reradiated in the form of heat; that heat is trapped in the lower atmosphere by several gases and then reradiated back to earth

    • the greenhouse effect is natural, we’ve known about it since about the mid-1800’s, and it is critical to the temperature on earth which allows humans to live and function as we do

  • atmospheric levels of CO2

    • in the early 1900s, Svante Arrhenius predicted that the increasing amount of CO2 being released would warm the planet

    • in 1958, Charles David Keeling took the first measurement of atmospheric CO2 levels

      • daily measurements have been taken since then at a weather station in Mauna Kea, Hawaii

      • the keeling curve

  • global temperatures have risen

changes in the atmosphere

measuring temperature

  • thermometers were invented in the 17th century

  • satellites measure infrared radiation emitted from the sea surface

proxies for temperature

  • proxy: a figure that can be used to represent the value of something in a calculation

  • O2 isotopes in water

  • density of tree rings — gives information on temperature in precipitation

ice core analysis

  • ice core — ”frozen time capsules”

  • oldest records extend 130,000 years back in Greenland, 800,000 years in Antarctica

  • ice layers hold particles and contain tiny bubbles of atmospheric air (fossil air pockets)

the CO2 increase

  • CO2 levels vary naturally but natural variations cannot explain the recent spike in CO2 concentration

  • climate change

    • the greenhouse effect is a natural phenomenon that keeps the earth warm

    • human (anthropogenic) activities are responsible for the increase in release of greenhouse gases

    • because of higher concentrations of greenhouse gases, the global temperature is increasing

climate models and predictions

  • the keeling curve

    • we cannot just extrapolate the keeling curve because there are other greenhouse gases whose concentrations are changing and the oceans will remain warm for a while

  • feedback mechanisms

    • positive feedback mechanisms

      • reinforce and amplify ongoing trends

      • eg. higher temperature → more water evaporation → more water vapor in the atmosphere → water vapor is a greenhouse gas → higher temperature

    • negative feedback mechanisms

      • diminish or reverse a particular trend and maintain the initial conditions

      • eg. higher temperature → more water evaporation → more water vapor in the atmosphere → more clouds → more reflection of sunlight → less sunlight reaching the surface → lower temperatures (cooling)

climate models

  • computational devices for solving large sets of equations

  • not perfect, but can be tested against reality over time

  • create possible “scenarios,” some more optimistic than others

  • in the context of the climate, scenarios are called representative concentration pathways (RPCs)

  • climate scenarios

tipping points

  • tipping point: the critical point in a situation, process, or system beyond which a significant and often unstoppable effect or change takes place

  • we are currently on the brink of five disastrous climate tipping points

  • spurious correlation: a false correlation or fallacy; an attempt to draw a correlation between two things which are not related