Greenhouse Effect vs. Global Warming
The Greenhouse effect is the trapping of the sun's warmth in the lower atmosphere of the earth caused by certain gases in the atmosphere (water vapor, carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide, and methane) that trap energy from the sun. The term "greenhouse effect" may be used to refer either to the natural greenhouse effect, due to naturally occurring greenhouse gases, which enable the energy necessary for sustaining life on earth, or to the enhanced greenhouse effect, which results from gases emitted by human activity which results in global warming that threatens life on earth.
Greenhouse Effect K-12 Experiments
Greenhouse Effect
The greenhouse effect, first discovered by Joseph Fourier in 1824, and quantified by Svante Arrhenius in 1896, is the process by which an atmosphere warms a planet.
Mars, Venus and other celestial bodies with atmospheres (such as Titan) have greenhouse effects, but for simplicity the rest of this article will refer to the case of Earth.
The term greenhouse effect may be used to refer to two
different things in common parlance: the natural greenhouse effect,
which refers to the greenhouse effect which occurs naturally on Earth,
and the enhanced (anthropogenic) greenhouse effect, which results from
human activities (see also global warming). The former is accepted by all; the latter is accepted by most scientists, although there is some dispute.
The natural greenhouse effect
Process
The Earth receives an enormous amount of solar radiation. Just above the atmosphere, the solar power flux density averages about 1366 watts per square metre, or 1.740×1017 W over the entire Earth. This figure vastly exceeds the power generated by human activities.
The solar power hitting Earth is balanced over time by a roughly
equal amount of power radiating from the Earth (as the amount of energy
from the Sun that is stored is small). Almost all radiation leaving the
Earth takes two forms: reflected solar radiation and thermal blackbody radiation.
Reflected solar radiation accounts for 30% of the Earth's total
radiation: on average, 6% of the incoming solar radiation is reflected
by the atmosphere, 20% is reflected by clouds, and 4% is reflected by
the surface.
The remaining 70% of the incoming solar radiation is absorbed: 16%
by the atmosphere (including the almost complete absorption of
shortwave ultraviolet over most areas by the stratospheric ozone layer);
3% by clouds; and 51% by the land and oceans. This absorbed energy
heats the atmosphere, oceans, land and powers life on the planet.
Like the Sun, the Earth is a thermal blackbody radiator. So because
the Earth's surface is much cooler than the Sun (287 K vs 5780 K), Wien's displacement law
dictates that Earth must radiate its thermal energy at much longer
wavelengths than the Sun. While the Sun's radiation peaks at a visible
wavelength of 500 nanometers, Earth's radiation peak is in the longwave
(far) infrared at about 10 micrometres.
The Earth's atmosphere is largely transparent at visible and
near-infrared wavelengths, but not at 10 micrometres. Only about 6% of
the Earth's total radiation to space is direct thermal radiation from
the surface. The atmosphere absorbs 71% of the surface thermal
radiation before it can escape. The atmosphere itself behaves as a
blackbody radiator in the far infrared, so it re-radiates this energy.
The Earth's atmosphere and clouds therefore account for 91.4% of its
longwave infrared radiation and 64% of Earth's total emissions at all
wavelengths. The atmosphere and clouds get this energy from the solar
energy they directly absorb; thermal radiation from the surface; and
from heat brought up by convection and the condensation of water vapor.
Because the atmosphere is such a good absorber of longwave infrared,
it effectively forms a one-way blanket over Earth's surface. Visible
and near-visible radiation from the Sun easily gets through, but
thermal radiation from the surface can't easily get back out. In
response, Earth's surface warms up. The power of the surface radiation
increases by the Stefan-Boltzmann law until it (over time) compensates for the atmospheric absorption.
The surface of the Earth is in constant flux with daily, yearly, and
ages long cycles and trends in temperature and other variables from a
variety of causes.
The result of the greenhouse effect is that average surface
temperatures are considerably higher than they would otherwise be if
the Earth's surface temperature were determined solely by the albedo and blackbody properties of the surface.
It is commonplace for simplistic descriptions of the "greenhouse"
effect to assert that the same mechanism warms greenhouses (e.g. [1]), but this is an incorrect oversimplification: see below.
Limiting factors
The degree of the greenhouse effect is dependent primarily on the concentration of greenhouse gases in the planetary atmosphere. The deep and carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere of Venus causes a runaway greenhouse effect with surface temperatures hot enough to melt lead, the atmosphere of Earth creates habitable temperatures, and the thin atmosphere of Mars causes a minimal greenhouse effect.
The use of the term runaway greenhouse effect to describe the
effect as it occurs on Venus emphasises the interaction of the
greenhouse effect with other processes in feedback cycles. Venus is sufficiently strongly heated by the Sun that water is vaporised and so carbon dioxide
is not reabsorbed by the planetary crust. As a result, the greenhouse
effect has been progressively intensified by positive feedback. On
Earth there is a substantial hydrosphere and biosphere which respond to higher temperatures by recycling atmospheric carbon more quickly (in geologic terms; the timescale for the ocean/biosphere to remove a CO2
perturbation is on the order of several hundred years). The presence of
liquid water thus limits the increase in the greenhouse effect through
negative feedback. This state of affairs is expected to persist for at
least hundreds of millions of years, but, ultimately, the warming of an aging Sun will overwhelm this regulatory effect.
The average surface temperature would be -18°C without a greenhouse
effect or 72°C with just the greenhouse effect and no convection, but
in reality this temperature is closer to 15°C due to convective flow of
heat energy within the atmosphere and partly above much of the thermal
IR absorbence of the atmosphere. [2]
Recent measurements of carbon dioxide amounts from Mauna Loa observatory show that CO2 has increased from about 313 ppm (parts per million) in 1960 to about 375 ppm in 2005. The current observed amount of CO2 exceeds the geological record of CO2 maxima (~300 ppm) from ice core data (Hansen, J., Climate Change, 61, 269, 2005). This suggests that the CO2
production rate from increased industrial activity (automobile use and
fossil fuel generation) and other human activities such as land-use
changes has overwhelmed the normal feedback control mechanisms. Global
climate model calculations indicate that the elevated CO2 levels are likely to lead to global warming. There has been an observed global average temperature increase of about 0.5oC since 1960 (Science 308, 1431, 2005). There is still some public controversy about the role of human activities and that of CO2 and other greenhouse gas increases for global warming.
The greenhouse gases
Water vapor (H2O) causes about 60% of Earth's naturally-occurring greenhouse effect. Other gases influencing the effect include carbon dioxide (CO2) (about 26%), methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O) and ozone (O3) (about 8%). Collectively, these gases are known as greenhouse gases. The greenhouse effect due to carbon dioxide is specifically known as the Callendar effect.
The wavelengths of light that a gas absorbs can be modelled with quantum mechanics based on molecular properties of the different gas molecules.
It so happens that heteronuclear diatomic molecules and tri- (and more)
atomic gases absorb at infrared wavelengths but homonuclear diatomic
molecules do not absorb infrared light. This is why H2O and CO2 are greenhouse gases but the major atmospheric constituents (N2 and O2) are not.
Between the absorptions of water vapor and those of carbon dioxide, there is an atmospheric window where, prior to the industrial era, no infrared radiation was trapped, lying between 8 and 15 micrometres. Compounds such as perflurocarbons (CF4, C2F6 etc.), chlorofluorocarbons, halons and SF6
absorb very strongly in this window. This means that they are extremely
potent greenhouse gases, especially given the absence of natural sinks
to remove them. Perfluorocarbons can have a lifetime of 50,000 years,
possibly longer.
Effects of various gases
It is hard to disentangle the percentage contributions to the
greenhouse effect by different gases, because their respective infrared
spectrums overlap. However, one can calculate the percentage of trapped
radiation remaining, and discover:
Species
removed |
% trapped radiation
remaining |
| All |
0 |
| H2O, CO2, O3 |
50 |
| H2O |
64 |
| Clouds |
86 |
| CO2 |
88 |
| O3 |
97 |
| None |
100 |
(Source: Ramanathan and Coakley, Rev. Geophys and Space Phys., 16 465 (1978)); see also [3].
Water vapor effects
Water vapor
is the major contributor to Earth's greenhouse effect. Its effects vary
due to localized concentrations, mixture with other gases, frequencies
of light, different behavior in different levels of the atmosphere, and
whether positive or negative feedback takes place. High humidity also
affects cloud formation, which has major effects upon temperature but
is distinct from water vapor gas.
The IPCC TAR (2001; section 2.5.3) reports that, despite non-uniform
effects and difficulties in assessing the quality of the data, water
vapor has generally increased over the 20th Century.
Estimates of the percentage of Earth's greenhouse effect due to water vapor:
- 36% (table above)
- 60-70% Nova. Greenhouse - Green Planet [4]
Including clouds, the table above would suggest 50%. For the cloudless case, IPCC 1990, p 47-48 estimate water vapor at 60-70% whereas Baliunas & Soon estimate 88% [5] considering only H2O and CO2. Water vapor in the troposphere, unlike the better-known greenhouse gases such as CO2,
is essentially passive in terms of climate: the residence time for
water vapor in the atmosphere is short (about a week) so perturbations
to water vapor rapidly re-equilibriate. In contrast, the lifetimes of CO2,
methane, etc, are long (hundreds of years) and hence perturbations
remain. Thus, in response to a temperature perturbation caused by
enhanced CO2, water vapor would increase, resulting in a
(limited) positive feedback and higher temperatures. In response to a
perturbation from enhanced water vapor, the atmosphere would
re-equilibriate due to clouds causing reflective cooling and
water-removing rain. The contrails of high-flying aircraft sometimes form high clouds which seem to slightly alter the local weather.
Real greenhouses
The term 'greenhouse effect' originally came from the greenhouses
used for gardening, but it is a misnomer since greenhouses operate
differently [6] [7].
A greenhouse is built of glass; it heats up primarily because the Sun
warms the ground inside it, which warms the air near the ground, and
this air is prevented from rising and flowing away. The warming inside
a greenhouse thus occurs by suppressing convection and turbulent
mixing. 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 (Wood, 1909): a "greenhouse"
built of rock salt (which is transparent to IR) heats up just as one
built of glass does. Greenhouses thus work primarily by preventing convection; the greenhouse effect however reduces radiation loss, not convection. It is quite common, however, to find sources (e.g. [8] [9])
that make the "greenhouse" analogy. Although the primary mechanism for
warming greenhouses is the prevention of mixing with the free
atmosphere, the radiative properties of the glazing can still be
important to commercial growers. With the modern development of new
plastic surfaces and glazings for greenhouses, this has permitted
construction of greenhouses which selectively control radiation
transmittance in order to better control the growing environment.[10].
See also
References
- Earth Radiation Budget, http://marine.rutgers.edu/mrs/education/class/yuri/erb.html
- Fleagle, RG and Businger, JA: An introduction to atmospheric physics, 2nd edition, 1980
- Fraser, Alistair B., Bad Greenhouse http://www.ems.psu.edu/~fraser/Bad/BadGreenhouse.html
- Giacomelli, Gene A. and William J. Roberts1, Greenhouse Covering Systems, Rutgers University, downloaded from: http://ag.arizona.edu/ceac/research/archive/HortGlazing.pdf on 3-30-2005.
- Ann Henderson-Sellers and McGuffie, K: A climate modelling primer (quote: Greenhouse
effect: the effect of the atmosphere in re-readiating longwave
radiation back to the surface of the Earth. It has nothing to do with
glasshouses, which trap warm air at the surface).
- Idso, S.B.: Carbon Dioxide: friend or foe, 1982 (quote: ...the
phraseology is somewhat in appropriate, since CO2 does not warm the
planet in a manner analogous to the way in which a greenhouse keeps its
interior warm).
- Kiehl, J.T., and Trenberth, K. (1997). Earth's annual mean global energy budget, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 78 (2), 197–208.
- Piexoto, JP and Oort, AH: Physics of Climate, American Institute of Physics, 1992 (quote: ...the
name water vapor-greenhouse effect is actually a misnomer since heating
in the usual greenhouse is due to the reduction of convection)
- Wood, R.W. (1909). Note on the Theory of the Greenhouse, Philosophical Magazine 17, p319–320. For the text of this online, see http://www.wmconnolley.org.uk/sci/wood_rw.1909.html
- IPCC assessment reports, see http://www.ipcc.ch/
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