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CHAPTER 2 ENERGY THAT DRIVES THE STORMS

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Page 1: CHAPTER 2 ENERGY THAT DRIVES THE STORMS CHAPTER 2 ENERGY THAT DRIVES THE STORMS

CHAPTER 2

ENERGY THAT DRIVES THE STORMS

CHAPTER 2

ENERGY THAT DRIVES THE STORMS

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Howdy, Dr. D. I am Here! (And I have an iClicker2) Choose D on your iClicker2

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What is the name of the device attached to a weather balloon to sense the temperature, humidity, pressure and winds as it is pulled aloft?

A. Radiosonde B. Rawindsonde C. Sonic Anemometer D. Sonic the Hedgehog E. Sondheim, Stephen

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Temperature measures the average speed of air molecules◦ This also means it is a measure of kinetic

energy But what is energy, really?

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Energy: the ability or capacity to do work on matter Energy changes forms and transfers from one body to

another, but cannot be created nor destroyed Potential energy: When something has the potential

to do work (it is up in the air, it can be burned, etc.) Kinetic energy: the energy of motion (the wind, a

car) Everything has kinetic energy – the molecules that

make it up are moving, and the faster they move, the higher the temperature

This reflects the internal energy of the substance When this energy is being transferred, it is called heat

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Three ways for heat to be transferred:◦ Conduction: Heat transfer within a substance:

touching a metal pan

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Energy travels from hot to cold

Metal is a good conductor, air is a poor conductor

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Three ways for heat to be transferred:◦ Conduction: Heat transfer within a substance:

touching a metal pan◦ Convection: Heat transfer by a fluid (such as

water or air): Warm, less-dense air rising In meteorology, we only call vertical motions

“convection”, and we use “advection” for horizontal motions such as the wind

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Remember: at the same pressure, warm air is less dense than cold air

Energy has been transported upward

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Three ways for heat to be transferred:◦ Conduction: Heat transfer within a substance:

touching a metal pan◦ Convection: Heat transfer by a fluid (such as

water or air): Warm, less-dense air rising In meteorology, we only call vertical motions

“convection”, and we use “advection” for horizontal motions such as the wind

◦ Radiation: Heat transfer that does not require the substances touching or a fluid between them: energy from the sun

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Radiation travels in the form of waves, which move at the speed of light in a vacuum (186,000 miles per second)

The shorter the wave, the more energy it carries!

Our eyes can only see radiation between 0.4-0.7 μm

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Conduction: Only important very near the ground (air is a poor conductor)

Convection: Many clouds form as a result of convection, as warm, moist air rises

Radiation: Energy from the sun warms the planet; causes daily changes in temperature, and much more

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Everything with a temperature emits radiation! The amount of radiation emitted is proportional

to the 4th power of T: if we doubled our temperature, we would emit 16 times more radiation (Stefan-Boltzmann Law)

Objects emit a radiation “spectrum” (a variety of wavelengths)

Hotter objects emit most of their energy at shorter wavelengths, as shown by Wien’s Law:

λmax = 2897/T

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(The scale on the left is 100,000 times greater than the scale on the right)

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Solar radiation is often called “shortwave” radiation◦ Much of the solar radiation is in the visible part of

the spectrum – we can see the sun, and the reflection and absorption of solar radiation allows us to see other things

Earth’s radiation is “infrared” or “longwave” radiation◦ Not visible to our eyes◦ Transfers much less energy

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If the Earth is radiating energy all the time, why is it not extremely cold and always getting colder?

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Objects with a temperature don’t just emit, they also absorb!

If something emits more than it absorbs, it will cool, if it absorbs more than it emits, it will warm

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Objects that are good absorbers are also generally good emitters

Consider an asphalt road: During the day the

asphalt absorbs solar radiation and warms

At night the asphalt emits infrared radiation and cools relative to its surroundings

Asphalt Road(warms due to solar radiation)

Asphalt Road(cools by IR radiation)

Day

Night

Warm

Cool

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Objects that absorb all radiation hitting them and emit all possible radiation at their temperature are known as “blackbodies” (but they don’t need to be black)

The sun and the earth’s surface behave as blackbodies, but the atmosphere does not

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Averaged over a long period of time, the amount of shortwave energy received from the sun is equal to the amount of longwave energy emitted by the earth’s surface – the planet is in radiative equilibrium – on average, the planet does not heat or cool

But this calculation gives an average temperature of 255 K (0° F) – a frozen earth!

What we actually observe, however, is an average surface temperature of 288 K (59° F) – much more livable. Why?

Radiative equilibrium: incoming = outgoing

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For instance, glass: absorbs IR and UV, but not visible light

Important selective absorbers:◦ Ozone (O3) in the

stratosphere: absorbs ultraviolet (UV) radiation: keeps us from getting a sunburn!

◦ Water vapor (H2O), Carbon dioxide (CO2), Methane (CH4): absorb longwave radiation, but not shortwave

UV Infrared

Ozone absorbs UV

Per

cent

age

abso

rbed

Water vapor absorbs some IR

CO2 absorbs some IR

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Can be: Absorbed by the atmosphere (19% of

incoming radiation: atmosphere is relatively transparent to solar radiation)

Reflected back to space by clouds, aerosols, and the atmosphere (26%)

Transmitted down to the surface◦ This can be reflected (4%)◦ Or absorbed by the surface (51%)

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The solar radiation reflected by things in the atmosphere (26%) and the surface (4%) compose what is called the planetary albedo, which is observed to be 30% (averaged over the entire planet)

Each surface has a different albedo – snow and clouds are very reflective, water and dark ground are not

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Instead of being radiated straight out to space, most of the longwave radiation is absorbed by the atmosphere: the selective absorbers!

6% is transmitted out to space 94% is absorbed by the atmosphereThe atmosphere then emits radiation (it has a

temperature, after all!): the upward radiation escapes to space, the downward radiation comes down to the surface

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This downward longwave radiation warms the surface

When this is accounted for, we can calculate the average temperature of 288 K

Without the greenhouse effect, Earth’s temperature would not be suitable for life!

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The greenhouse effect absolutely exists, and it is very well understood scientifically

The greenhouse effect is simply this: The surface of the Earth is warmer than it would be in the absence of an atmosphere because it receives energy from two sources: the Sun and the atmosphere.

It is the enhancement of the greenhouse effect that causes concern for global warming…more on this later.

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What process could take heat from the surface and transfer it to the atmosphere?

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Fig. 2.13, p. 50

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Heat energy is required to change the phase of water – this heat is “hidden” or “latent” – we can’t measure it with a thermometer

Instead of being used to change the temperature of the substance, the heat is used to change the phase

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The evaporation of water from oceans and lakes transfers heat from the surface to the atmosphere

When warm, moist air rises and clouds form, latent heat is released (condensation) – This is “moist convection”, and is another way that things are brought back into balance

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All of the previous information was for the entire globe, averaged over long periods of time

At a given location, there is very rarely radiative equilibrium: during the day, we get more solar energy than the earth emits, and the opposite is true at night

This is why it warms during the day (energy surplus) and cools at night (energy deficit)

Clouds are very important locally◦ During the day, more clouds = higher albedo and

less shortwave radiation reaching the surface◦ At night, clouds absorb longwave radiation and

emit back to the surface

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Radiation surplus in the Tropics; deficit near the poles

Do the poles get colder and colder, and the tropics hotter and hotter every year?

No! Circulations in the atmosphere and ocean transfer heat from the Tropics to the poles. More on this later in the semester.

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“If you graduated from Harvard, do you think you would know why it is warmer in summer than in winter? Educators who surveyed Harvard students on their graduation day in 1986 discovered that most of them could not correctly answer this question.”

-- Harvard Gazette, 1997

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When the sun is directly overhead, the radiation is concentrated over a smaller area

When at an angle, that same energy is spread out over a much larger area

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…at an angle of about 23.5°

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The tilt of Earth on its axis is the primary reason there are seasons

In December, the Southern Hemisphere is strongly tilted toward the sun; they get longer days and the sun is high in the sky◦ The Northern Hemisphere is tilted away from the

sun; we have shorter days and winter In June, the opposite is true March and September are the “equinoxes”,

when the solar energy is maximized at the equator

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If the sun is out for all 24 hours in Alaska, why isn’t it hotter there than in College Station where it’s only light for 14 hours?

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Fig. 2.19, p. 56

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Stepped Art

Fig. 3-8, p. 63

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(incoming minus outgoing)http://profhorn.meteor.wisc.edu/wxwise/AckermanKnox/chap2/ERBE%20Net.html

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Equinox, “equal night” ◦ Day and night are the same length; sun is directly

over the equator (March 20 and September 22) Solstice, “sun stands still”

◦ Summer solstice: June 21 – longest day of year in northern hemisphere

◦ Winter solstice: December 21 – shortest day of year in northern hemisphere

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In meteorology, seasons are DJF (winter), MAM (spring), JJA (summer), SON (autumn)

The “first official day of winter” on December 21 is the astronomical definition

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Average high

Average low

Record high

Record low

http://www.srh.noaa.gov/hgx/?n=climate_cll

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MarchMarch JuneJune Sept.Sept. Dec.Dec.

SouthSouth

12 hrs daylight15 hrs daylight

12 hrs daylight

9 hrs daylight

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The core: estimated to be ~15 million degrees Celsius

The photosphere (what we see) is about 6000°C

Sunspots: cooler, dark regions

Corona: much hotter (2 million °C)

Chromosphere: cooler region between the photosphere and the corona

Solar flares and prominences: jets of gas that shoot up into the corona

Solar flares can disrupt Earth’s magnetic field, causing problems with radio and satellite communications

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Much like a bar magnet, Earth has a magnetic field

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Charged particles from the sun, called the “solar wind”, distorts its shape

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Charged particle from the solar wind “excites” atoms or molecules in the upper atmosphere (thermosphere)

This causes the electron to jump to a higher energy level

When it returns to normal, it emits light

(Solar wind)

(Air molecule or other atom)

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Different elements give off different color light (oxygen is red or green, nitrogen is red or violet)

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Northern hemisphere = “aurora borealis” (northern lights)

Southern hemisphere = “aurora australis” (southern lights)

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Auroras tend to happen where magnetic field lines intersect the earth’s surface (at high latitudes)

Number of nights per year with aurora

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UV-B radiation responsible for most sunburn, though UV-A can also cause it

11 am to 3 pm: biggest threat of sunburn NWS UV forecast:

http://www.nws.noaa.gov/view/national.php?prodtype=ultraviolet