Environmental Science 17
atomic chlorine
Chlorine atoms influence cycles that are linked to ozone destruction; this greenhouse gas is potentially toxic plant and animal life
Greenhouse gases
Gases, such as carbon dioxide, methane, and CFCs that are relatively transparent to the higher-energy sunlight, but trap lower-energy infrared radiation
Heat
Infrared radiation
Ice ages
Intervals in the history of the Earth, especially during the last two million years, when the avg global surface temperatures were lower than they are currently and continental ice sheets were much more extensive than they are today
UV
Relatively high-energy, short-wavelength, electromagnetic radiation (light). UV= 200-400nm
carbon tax
a tax levied on fossil fuels (or any fuels) in proportion to the amount of carbon emitted during combustion
Nimbus-7
A NASA satellite that confirmed the depletion of the ozone layer over the S. Pole in the 1980s
Melanoma
A condition of malignant skin cancer
cataracts
A condition where the lens of the eye becomes opaque
UN Framework Conventation on Climate Change (UN FCCC)
A convention agreed by to many nations at the 1992 Earth Summit. Although the convention does not establish legal obligations or specific target dates, it requires signing countries to use their best efforts to control emissions of GHGs
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
A large, international group of officials, scientists, and other researchers who, under the auspices of the UN, have been investigating the issue of global climate change , particularly potential future global warming
Ozone layer
A layer of ozone in the stratosphere, most concentrated at an altitude between about 12 and 16 miles
Little Ice Age
A period in Earth history, beginning in late medieval/early renaissance times and ending only two or three years ago, during which avg global temperatires were slightly lower then immediately before or after
CFCs
Artificially produced compounds primarily of carbon, fluorine, and chlorine
chlorine
A reactive element, found in chlorofluorcarbons and other substances, that has been implicated as a prime factor in the deterioration of the ozone layer
Ozone
An O3 molecule. Contributes to air pollution in the troposphere, but is an important natural component of the stratosphere
Montreal Protocol
An agreement reached in 1987 at a meeting in Montreal, Canada, whereby a number of industrialized countries pledged to freeze CFC production at 1986 levels and then gradually decrease CFC production to 50% of 1986 levels by 1999.
Kyoto Protocol
An amendment to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, which brings together industrial and developing countries to lower their GHG emissions in a unified fashion
General circulation models (GCMs)
Complex mathematical models that, with the help of supercomputers, simulate the Earth's climatic patterns
Radiation
Electromagnetic radiation; includes visible light, heat, UV, gamma, Xrays, and so forth. Emission of particles
Light pollution
Excess "waste" light given off by outside sources (or sources visible from the outside) at night
Infrared radiation
Low-energy, long-wavelength electromagnetic radiation that humans perceive as heat
Nitrogen oxides
NOx, important components of both lower atmospheric pollution and the upper atmospheric GHGs that promote global warming
Methane
Natural gas, a fossil fuel and potent greenhouse gas
aerosol spray
Products that are sprayed as a fine mist during use, such as canned spray paints, deodorants, and so forth
carbon emissions
The emission of carbon, primarily as carbon dioxide, into the atmosphere during the burning of fossil fuels and other organic matter and similar activities
Troposphere
The lowermost thermal layer of the atmosphere, wherein temperatures normally decline with increasing altitude; the layer of the atmosphere in which most weather phenomena take place
Sky glow
The phenomenon when the sky at night in a certain area is not dark as it would be naturally, but glows (perhaps in shades of pink, orange, white, yellow, or gray) due to excess light in the local atmosphere
carbon dioxide
The primary greenhouse gas
Mt. Pinatubo
The site of a 1991 volcanic eruption in the Phillipines that spewed so much smoke and ash into the atmosphere that it temporarily depressed global temperatures (minor worldwide cooling effect)
Stratosphere
The thermal layer of the atmosphere above the troposphere in which temperature increased with altitude. Has ozone layer
Global dimming
a gradual reduction in the amount of solar radiation that penetrates Earth's surface due to the increased reflectivity of clouds and pollution that results from fossil fuels
Greenhouse effect
the warming up of the lower atmosphere due to the accumulation of greenhouse gases that trap heat near the surface of the earth