Greenhouse
effect
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A representation of the exchanges of energy between the source (the Sun), the Earth's surface, the Earth's atmosphere, and the ultimate sink outer space. The
ability of the atmosphere to capture and recycle energy emitted by the Earth
surface is the defining characteristic of the greenhouse effect.
Another diagram of the greenhouse effect
The greenhouse effect is a process by which thermal radiation from a
planetary surface is absorbed by atmospheric greenhouse gases, and is re-radiated
in all directions. Since part of this re-radiation is back towards the surface
and the lower atmosphere, it results in an elevation of the average surface
temperature above what it would be in the absence of the gases.[1][2]
Solar radiation at the frequencies of visible
light largely passes through the atmosphere to warm the planetary surface, which
then emits this energy at the lower frequencies of infrared thermal radiation. Infrared radiation is absorbed by greenhouse gases,
which in turn re-radiate much of the energy to the surface and lower
atmosphere. The mechanism is named after the effect of solar radiation passing
through glass and warming a greenhouse, but the
way it retains heat is fundamentally different as a greenhouse works by
reducing airflow, isolating the warm air inside the structure so that heat is
not lost by convection.[2][3][4]
If an ideal thermally conductive blackbody were the same distance from the Sun as the Earth is, it would have a
temperature of about 5.3 °C. However, since the Earth reflects about 30%[5][6] of the incoming sunlight,
this idealized planet's effective
temperature (the temperature of a blackbody that would emit
the same amount of radiation) would be about −18 °C.[7][8] The surface temperature of
this hypothetical planet is 33 °C below Earth's actual surface temperature
of approximately 14 °C.[9] The mechanism that produces
this difference between the actual surface temperature and the effective
temperature is due to the atmosphere and is known as the greenhouse effect.[10]
Earth’s natural greenhouse effect makes life as we know it possible.
However, human activities, primarily the burning of fossil fuels and clearing
of forests, have intensified the natural greenhouse effect, causing global warming.[11]
Contents
- 1 History
- 2 Mechanism
- 3 Greenhouse gases
- 4 Role in climate
change
- 5 Real greenhouses
- 6 Bodies other than
Earth
- 7 See also
- 8 References
- 9 Further reading
- 10 External links
History
The existence of the greenhouse effect was argued for by Joseph Fourier in 1824.
The argument and the evidence was further strengthened by Claude Pouillet in 1827 and
1838, and reasoned from experimental observations by John Tyndall in 1859,
and more fully quantified by Svante Arrhenius in 1896.[12][13]
In 1917 Alexander Graham
Bell wrote “[The unchecked burning of fossil fuels] would have a sort of
greenhouse effect”, and “The net result is the greenhouse becomes a sort of
hot-house.”[14][15] Bell went
on to also advocate for the use of alternate energy sources, such as solar energy.[16]
Mechanism
The Earth receives energy from the Sun in the form UV, visible, and near IR radiation, most of which
passes through the atmosphere without
being absorbed. Of the total amount of energy available at the top of the
atmosphere (TOA), about 50% is absorbed at the Earth's surface. Because it is
warm, the surface radiates far IR thermal radiation that consists of
wavelengths that are predominantly much longer than the wavelengths that were
absorbed (the overlap between the incident solar spectrum and the terrestrial
thermal spectrum is small enough to be neglected for most purposes). Most of
this thermal radiation is absorbed by the atmosphere and re-radiated both
upwards and downwards; that radiated downwards is absorbed by the Earth's
surface. This trapping of long-wavelength thermal radiation leads to a higher
equilibrium temperature than if the atmosphere were absent.
This highly simplified picture of the basic mechanism needs to be qualified
in a number of ways, none of which affect the fundamental process.
The solar radiation spectrum for direct light at both the top of the Earth's atmosphere and at
sea level
Synthetic stick absorption spectrum of a simple gas mixture corresponding
to the Earth's atmosphere composition based on HITRAN data [17] created
using Hitran on the Web system.[18] Green color
- water vapor, red - carbon dioxide, WN - wavenumber (caution:
lower wavelengths on the
right, higher on the left).
- The incoming radiation from the Sun is mostly in
the form of visible light and nearby wavelengths, largely in the range
0.2–4 μm, corresponding to the Sun's radiative
temperature of 6,000 K.[19] Almost
half the radiation is in the form of "visible" light, which our
eyes are adapted to use.[20]
- About 50% of the Sun's energy is absorbed at the
Earth's surface and the rest is reflected or absorbed by the atmosphere.
The reflection of light back into space—largely by clouds—does not much
affect the basic mechanism; this light, effectively, is lost to the
system.
- The absorbed energy warms the surface. Simple
presentations of the greenhouse effect, such as the idealized
greenhouse model, show this heat being
lost as thermal radiation. The reality is more complex: the atmosphere
near the surface is largely opaque to thermal radiation (with important
exceptions for "window" bands), and most heat loss from the
surface is by sensible heat and latent heat
transport. Radiative energy losses become increasingly important higher in
the atmosphere largely because of the decreasing concentration of water
vapor, an important greenhouse gas. It is more realistic to think of the
greenhouse effect as applying to a "surface" in the mid-troposphere, which
is effectively coupled to the surface by a lapse rate.
- The simple picture assumes a steady state. In the
real world there is the diurnal cycle as
well as seasonal cycles and weather. Solar heating only applies during
daytime. During the night, the atmosphere cools somewhat, but not greatly,
because its emissivity is low, and during the day the atmosphere warms. Diurnal temperature changes decrease with height in the
atmosphere.
- Within the region where radiative effects are
important the description given by the idealized greenhouse model becomes
realistic: The surface of the Earth, warmed to a temperature around
255 K, radiates long-wavelength, infrared heat
in the range 4–100 μm.[19] At
these wavelengths, greenhouse gases that were largely transparent to
incoming solar radiation are more absorbent.[19] Each
layer of atmosphere with greenhouses gases absorbs some of the heat being
radiated upwards from lower layers. It re-radiates in all directions, both
upwards and downwards; in equilibrium (by definition) the same amount as
it has absorbed. This results in more warmth below. Increasing the
concentration of the gases increases the amount of absorption and
re-radiation, and thereby further warms the layers and ultimately the
surface below.[8]
- Greenhouse gases—including most diatomic gases
with two different atoms (such as carbon monoxide, CO) and all gases with
three or more atoms—are able to absorb and emit infrared radiation. Though
more than 99% of the dry atmosphere is IR transparent (because the main
constituents—N2, O2, and Ar—are not able to directly
absorb or emit infrared radiation), intermolecular collisions cause the
energy absorbed and emitted by the greenhouse gases to be shared with the
other, non-IR-active, gases.
Greenhouse gases
By their percentage contribution to the greenhouse effect on Earth the four
major gases are:[21][22]
- water vapor, 36–70%
- carbon dioxide, 9–26%
- methane, 4–9%
- ozone, 3–7%
The major non-gas contributor to the Earth's greenhouse effect, clouds, also absorb and emit
infrared radiation and thus have an effect on radiative properties of the
atmosphere.[22]
Role in climate change
Atmospheric gases only absorb some wavelengths of energy but are
transparent to others. The absorption patterns of water vapor (blue peaks) and
carbon dioxide (pink peaks) overlap in some wavelengths. Carbon dioxide is not
as strong a greenhouse gas as water vapor, but it absorbs energy in wavelengths
(12-15 micrometers) that water vapor does not, partially closing the “window”
through which heat radiated by the surface would normally escape to space.
(Illustration NASA, Robert Rohde)[23]
Strengthening of the greenhouse effect through human activities is known as
the enhanced (or anthropogenic) greenhouse effect.[24] This
increase in radiative forcing from human activity is attributable mainly to increased atmospheric carbon
dioxide levels.[25] According
to the latest Assessment Report from the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change, "most of the
observed increase in globally averaged temperatures since the mid-20th century
is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas
concentrations".[26]
CO2 is produced by fossil fuel burning and other activities such
as cement production and tropical deforestation.[27]
Measurements of CO2 from the Mauna Loa observatory show that
concentrations have increased from about 313 ppm[28] in 1960 to
about 389 ppm in 2010. It reached the 400ppm milestone on May 9, 2013.[29] The current
observed amount of CO2 exceeds the geological record maxima (~300
ppm) from ice core data.[30] The effect
of combustion-produced carbon dioxide on the global climate, a special case of
the greenhouse effect first described in 1896 by Svante Arrhenius, has also
been called the Callendar effect.
Over the past 800,000 years,[31] ice core data shows that carbon dioxide has varied from values as low as 180 parts per
million (ppm) to the pre-industrial level of 270ppm.[32] Paleoclimatologists consider variations in carbon dioxide concentration to be a fundamental
factor influencing climate variations over this time scale.[33][34]
Real greenhouses
The "greenhouse effect" of the atmosphere is named by analogy to greenhouses which get
warmer in sunlight, but the mechanism by which the atmosphere retains heat is
different.[35] A
greenhouse works primarily by allowing sunlight to warm surfaces inside the
structure, but then preventing absorbed heat from leaving the structure through
convection, i.e. sensible heat transport. The
"greenhouse effect" heats the Earth because greenhouse gases absorb
outgoing radiative energy, heating the atmosphere which then emits radiative
energy with some of it going back towards the Earth.
A greenhouse is built of any material that passes sunlight, usually glass,
or plastic. It mainly heats up because the Sun warms the ground inside, which
then warms the air in the greenhouse. The air continues to heat because it is
confined within the greenhouse, unlike the environment outside the greenhouse
where warm air near the surface rises and mixes with cooler air aloft. This can
be demonstrated by opening a small window near the roof of a greenhouse: the
temperature will drop considerably. It has also been demonstrated
experimentally (R. W. Wood, 1909) that a "greenhouse" with a cover of rock
salt (which is transparent to infra red) heats up an enclosure similarly to one
with a glass cover.[3] Thus greenhouses work
primarily by preventing convective cooling.[4][36]
In contrast, the greenhouse effect heats the Earth because rather than
retaining (sensible) heat by physically preventing movement of the air,
greenhouse gases act to warm the Earth by re-radiating some of the energy back
towards the surface. This process may exist in real greenhouses, but is
comparatively unimportant there.
Bodies other than Earth
In the Solar System, Mars, Venus, and the moon Titan also exhibit greenhouse
effects; that on Venus is particularly large, due to its atmosphere, which
consists mainly of dense carbon dioxide.[37] Titan has
an anti-greenhouse
effect, in that its atmosphere absorbs solar radiation but is relatively
transparent to infrared radiation. Pluto also exhibits behavior superficially similar to the anti-greenhouse
effect.[38][39]
A runaway greenhouse
effect occurs if positive feedbacks lead to the evaporation of all greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.[40] A runaway
greenhouse effect involving carbon dioxide and water vapor is thought to have
occurred on Venus.
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