Global climate - natural greenhouse effect + natural variations in solar radiation Flashcards

1
Q

What does the natural greenhouse effect do?

A
  • Regulates Earth’s climate
  • Keeps Earth’s surface at 15 degrees C average (ideal for life)
    • which would otherwise be 33 degrees C lower (-18 degrees C = impossible for life)
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2
Q

How long has the natural greenhouse effect been taking place? and what causes it?

A

Caused by greenhouse gases
- A natural process that has always been present + predates human activity on Earth

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3
Q

What are greenhouse gases and examples of them?

A

They occur naturally in Earth’s atmosphere
Include:
- Methane
- Carbon dioxide
- Water vapour
- Nitrous oxide

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4
Q

How do greenhouse gases work?

A

Allow solar radiation to pass through/into the atmosphere - but then trap the heat like a ‘blanket’
- UV shortwave radiation passes through, but they absorb (trap) long-wave infrared radiation
- this infrared radiation is then re-radiated/ re-emitted by the Earth (heat energy).

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5
Q

What are the stages of the natural greenhouse effect?

A
  1. Short-wave radiation passes through atmosphere
  2. Some short-wave radiation is absorbed and is converted into long-wave radiation
  3. Some long-wave radiation passes back into space
  4. Some long-wave radiation is reflected off greenhouse gases back to Earth, heating Earth up
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6
Q

What kind of energy system does our atmosphere have?

A

The atmosphere is an open energy system, receiving energy from the sun
- Energy can enter and leave the atmosphere

  • Inputs: insolation (solar radiation)
  • Outputs: re-radiation
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7
Q

How much energy is lost to space through reflection?

A

31% (other 69% is lost later on)

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8
Q

How much energy is absorbed at the surface (which is then later lost to space)?

A

46%

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9
Q

Why is the Earth’s solar budget due natural conditions?

A

It’s a balanced system
- Radiation Input = Radiation output
(the Earth is neither heating nor cooling)

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10
Q

Where on Earth is the most solar energy received?

A

Most solar energy is received at the equator

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11
Q

Where is the least solar energy absorbed?

A

At the equators

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12
Q

What are the reasons for the Earth’s energy balance (places on Earth where more energy is absorbed than other areas)?

A
  • Effect of latitude on insolation
  • Seasons affecting amount of insolation
  • Effect of cloud cover on insolation
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13
Q

What is the effect of latitude on insolation?

A
  • Sun’s energy = more concentrated at equator than poles, where it spreads over larger area (less heat per km^2 at poles)
  • Sun’s energy travels through more atmosphere at poles + more energy absorbed by dust and pollen particles before it reaches surface
  • Angle of the sun is lower in the sky at the poles + more energy reflected into space
  • Snow + ice at poles also reflects more insolation than the land and sea at the equator
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14
Q

How do warm and cold currents redistribute energy around Earth?

A
  • Warm water moves from equator to poles
  • Cold water moves from the poles towards the equator
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15
Q

Why does the UK experience milder winters than expected?

A

For its latitude, winters should be colder, but due to the warming influence of the North Atlantic Drift, the winters are much milder than expected

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16
Q

How do seasons also affect the amount of solar radiation (insolation) reaching different parts of the Earth?

A

Spring Equinox - 21 March
Winter Solstice - 21 December
Autumn Equinox - 23 September
Summer Solstice - 21 June

  • This is because of the tilt of the Earth’s axis in relation to the sun
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17
Q

How is the effect of insolation reaching Earth affected by seasons exampled in the month of December?

A
  • Northern hemisphere is tilted away from the sun
  • Further north from the equator, days are shorter, less insolation received (e.g. UK)
  • Southern hemisphere is tilted towards the sun
  • Further south from the equator, days are longer, more insolation receiver (e.g. Australia)
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18
Q

What is the effect of cloud cover on insolation in Earth?

A

Stratocumulous clouds
- Less cloud cover = more insolation reaches
Earth’s surface

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19
Q

How long are the natural changes in the amount of solar radiation reaching the Earth?

A

Occur over different timescales (temporal patterns):
- Short-term (rapid - over years / decades)
or
- Long-term (slow - over centuries / millenia)

20
Q

What is the main example of long-term, natural variation in solar radiation + climate / temperature?

A

The glacial - interglacial cycle

21
Q

For how long have there been a series of Glacials + Interglacials?

A

Over the last 2 million years

22
Q

What are Glacial periods?

A

Relatively cool periods
100,000 years

23
Q

What are Inter-glacial periods?

A

Relatively warm periods
10,000 - 10,000 years

24
Q

What is our present Inter-glacial period called, and how long has it lasted?

A

The Holocene started around 12,000 years ago

25
Q

What provides us with evidence of these glacial/inter-glacial periods and how long they’ve lasted?

A

The Vostok Ice Core, Antarctica
- Evidence can be seen in the CO2 levels in the Vostok Ice Core
- provides over 400,000 years of climate data

26
Q

What is the difference in the amount of ice present in glacial vs inter-glacial periods?

A

Earth in the Devensian Glacial:
- Cooler = more ice
Earth in the Holocene inter-glacial (now):
- Warmer = less ice

27
Q

Why does Earth experience glacial and inter-glacial periods?

A

Because Earth’s orbit around the sun varies:
- from circular to elliptical

28
Q

Why does Earth’s orbit vary from elliptical to circular?

A

Because of the gravitational pull from other planets

29
Q

What are Milankovich cycles?

A

The changes in the Earth’s orbit affecting the amount of solar radiation heating Earth’s surface, and therefore Earth’s temperature:
- Elliptical = cooler = glacial
- Circular = warmer = inter-glacial

30
Q

How long do Milankovich cycles last?

A

The cycle from elliptical orbit to circular completes every 100,000 years

31
Q

What is stage one of the Milankovich cycle?

A

A change - elliptical orbit - in the Earth’s orbit kick starts the process of long-term climate change
- Less insolation
- Climate 0.5 degrees C cooler

32
Q

What is stage two of the Milankovich cycle?

A

The Albedo effect takes over, exaggerating the effect, causing temperatures to fall further and a glacial to occur
- more white snow + ice
- Earth’s albedo (reflectivity) increases
- More insolation reflected into space
- Climate 5 degrees C cooler ( = glacial)

33
Q

How is the process then reversed after the first two stages?

A

Reversed by a return to circular orbit
- more insolation
- climate 0.5 degrees C warmer

  • less white snow + ice
  • Earth’s albedo decreases
  • less insolation reflected into space
  • climate 5 degrees C warmer ( = inter-glacial)
34
Q

How does the albedo effect affect the Milankovich cycle?

A

It amplifies the Milankovich cycle / glacial - inter-glacial cycle

35
Q

When does the surface of the Earth absorb more heat?

A

When a surface doesn’t have snow or ice it absorbs more heat

36
Q

What does a low albedo cause?

A
  • 30% of insolation is reflected with low albedo
  • low albedo = inter-glacial
37
Q

What does a high albedo mean?

A
  • 90% of insolation is reflected with high albedo
  • high albedo = glacial
38
Q

What evidence is there for the glacial cycle in Britain?

A
  • When ice melted in Yorkshire about 2,000 years ago -> cargo of rocks was dumped miles away from home
    • These rocks were picked up by the glaciers + moved until the glacier melted
    • these out-of-place rocks are called erratics
  • Glaciers shaped everything in their path - gouged out some of the most spectacular landscapes in Britain
39
Q

What evidence is there for the inter-glacial cycle in Britain?

A
  • Most of last 2 million years - Ice Age was cold, but..
    • In London in 1930, builders dug up a collection
      exotic bones
      • e.g. one bone is 120,000 years old (which
        would place it in the middle of an ice age
      • however it does not belong to a wooly
        mammoth or polar bear
      • Instead it’s the tooth of a hippopotamus
    • This proves that the Ice Age was punctuated by
      warmer periods (some even warmer than today)
      • proves that right in the middle of London,
        120,000 years ago, icy wilderness was replaced
        by Serengeti plains
  • Glaciers –> Swamps
  • Mammoths –> Hippos
40
Q

What are examples of natural short-term changes in the climate?

A
  • Sun spots
  • Global dimming / Volcanic cooling
41
Q

What are sunspots?

A

Sunspots are the result of Magnetic storms which release increased solar radiation to Earth

42
Q

How often do sunspots occur?

A

An 11 year cycle has been identified

43
Q

How do sun spots create short-term changes in Earth’s climate?

A

As the number of sunspots increases, so does the temperature on Earth
- are evidence of high energy phases in solar activity

44
Q

What provides evidence for the effect sunspots had on Earth’s climate (UK example)?

A

1694 ‘frost fair’ on the Thames in London
- The Thames often froze in winter and ‘frost fairs’ were held on the ice
- During a period of colder temperatures known as the Little Ice Age, when winter temperatures were 2 degrees C lower than normal

45
Q

What was the coldest period of the Little Ice Age called?

A

The Maunder Minimum
- a period of few sunspots = low solar energy

46
Q

How long do Northern Hemisphere changes last?

A

10,000 years (average temperatures varied, but these are relatively small + short in terms of geological time)

47
Q
A