GEOLOGY 31 CHAP 2
Incoming radiation an high latitudes
Sun's rays strike at a more indirect angle
Incoming radiation from the sun
Wavelengths between 0.4 and 0.7 micrometers (VISIBLE LIGHT) Short wave radiation
absolute zero
-273 degrees celsius, 0K (kelvin)
Specific heat of water
1 cal/g*K
Earth's average albedo
10%
Earths tilts
23.5 degrees
Of the 70% of solar radiation that enters the climate
3/4ths is absorbed by Earth's surface and 1/4th by clouds, and water vapor in the atmosphere.
Snow and Ice at higher latitudes and their albedo percentage
60- 90%
Electromagnetic spectrum
All of the frequencies or wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation
intertropical convergence zone
An area of Earth that receives the most intense sunlight; where the ascending branches of the two Hadley cells converge. Region near the equator where the northern and the southern trade winds meet.
Back radiation and green house gases
Earths greenhouse gases absorb 95 percent of longwave back radiation emitted from the surface, which doesn't allow heat to back radiate into space, which makes the earth 31 percent warmer than it would be otherwise.
ELECTROMAGNETIS RADIATION
How energy travels through space in these wave forms
Tropical and subtropical latitudes below 35 degrees have a net excess of incoming solar radiation over outgoing back radiation
Latitudes higher than 35 degrees, the opposite happens
Two main gases in the atmos
Nitrogen and Oxygen (NOT GREEN HOUSE GASES) They do not trap outgoing radiation
Thermal inertia
Tendency of a substance to resist change in temperature with the gain or loss of heat energy. Differences in amplitude and timing of response between land surfaces and the upper ocean layers
specific heat
The amount of energy required to raise the temperature of 1 gram of a substance by 1 degree celcius number of calories absorbed
water vapor feedback
The net effect of increasing water vapor in global warming. Consists of the stronger positive feedback due to increased specific humidity and the weaker negative feedback caused by decreasing saturated adiabatic lapse rate.
Sensible heat
The product of the temperature of the air and its specific heat. It is carried along moving air masses
lapse rate
The rate at which Earth's atmosphere cools with increasing altitude, or warms with decreasing altitude.
Convection
The transfer of heat by the movement of a fluid
Clouds
Trap outgoing radiation from Earth's surface
Heat energy is measured in units of
calories and joules
OZONE
a gas molecule that is made up of three oxygen atoms located in the stratosphere blocks UV radiation
Hadley cell
a system of vertical and horizontal air circulation predominating in tropical and subtropical regions and creating major weather patterns. Tropical Circulation Pattern The rising motion in the tropical part of the hadley cell represents an enormous transfer of heat through the atmosphere from low to high altitudes. The Hadley cell is completed at earths surface where trade winds from both hemispheres blow from the subtropics toward the tropics and replace the rising air.
adiabatic process
change occurring within a system as a result of transfer of energy to or from the system in the form of work only; i
Back radiation
electromagnetic energy at long (infrared) wavelengths emitted from any material with a temperature above absolute zero (0K)
water
has high thermal inertia
Average temp of earth
is 59 degrees
Incoming radiation
is stronger at low latitudes because the sun is more overhead
Water stored in 3 ways
liquid, ice, and water vapor.
atmospheric pressure
pressure exerted by the weight of the overlying column of air, which increases towards the lower elevations
Heat in low latitude oceans
provides most of the fuel that runs Earth's climate system
Monsoon
seasonal transfer of heat between the tropical ocean and the land
Low latitude oceans
store most solar heat
latent heat
the heat required to convert a solid into a liquid or vapor, or a liquid into a vapor, without change of temperature.
saturation vapor density
the maximum amount of water vapor that air can hold at a given temperature