chapter 4 atmosphere and surface energy balances

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Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances Robert W. Christopherson Charlie Thomsen

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Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances. Robert W. Christopherson Charlie Thomsen. Energy Essentials . Energy and matter make up the universe. E=mc 2 Matter: the “stuff” we see, smell and touch. Energy: exists in various forms  Energy from the Sun (electromagnetic radiation) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Chapter 4Atmosphere and Surface Energy

Balances

Robert W. ChristophersonCharlie Thomsen

Page 2: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Energy Essentials 

Energy and matter make up the universe. E=mc2

Matter: the “stuff” we see, smell and touch.

Energy: exists in various forms Energy from the Sun (electromagnetic radiation)

Energy in Food (chemical)

The heat we feel

Energy can convert from one form to other forms (e.g?)

Definition: The capacity to do work

Page 3: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Forms of Energy  

Kinetic Energy: Energy associated with an object by virtue of its motion.

e.g. Kinetic energy of a moving hammer can drive in a nail. The bigger the hammer and the fast the swing, the higher the kinetic energy.

Kinetic energy at atomic level is significant as atoms and molecules are continually vibrating.

Potential Energy:To potential to do work

e.g. suspended hailstone possess potential energy.

Page 4: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Solar Radiation Passing AtmosphereScattering: Air particles alter direction of light, without altering its wavelengths.

Raleigh Scattering

scattering by atmospheric molecules (scattering particle’s diameter smaller than wavelength)

Selective: scattering strongly

Mie Scattering

Scattering by aerosols (scattering particle’s diameter equal or greater than wavelength.

Non-selective.

Reflection: Deflection of photons from the objects that radiation falls upon.

Clouds reflect solar radiation, cooling the Earth.

AbsorptionSelective, not all

Both atmospheric molecules and aerosols absorb solar radiation.

Page 5: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Refraction

Figure 4.4

Page 6: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Energy Pathways

Figure 4.1

Page 7: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Insolation at Earth’s Surface

Figure 4.2

Page 8: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Daily Net Radiation at TOA

Figure 2.11

Page 9: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Albedo

Figure 4.5

Page 10: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

July and January Albedos

Figure 4.6

Satellite Measurements

Page 11: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Clouds and Albedo

Figure 4.7

Page 12: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Atmospheric Aerosols

Figure 4.8

Page 13: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Heat TransferDefinition:

the amount of internal energy of matter transferred between two objects due to temperature difference.

Air is a poor conductor of heat

ConductionMolecule-to-molecule transfer

ConvectionEnergy transferred by vertical movement of substance

AdvectionHorizontally dominant movement of substance

RadiationEnergy traveling through air or space without medium

Blackbody emits radiation according three radiation laws introduced early.

Page 14: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Heat Transfer

Figure 4.9

Page 15: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

The Greenhouse Effect and Atmospheric Warming

Atmosphere absorbs heat energy

A real greenhouse traps heat inside

Atmosphere delays transfer of heat from Earth into space

Page 16: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Clouds and Forcing

Figure 4.10

Page 17: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Energy Budget by Latitude

Figure 4.13

Page 18: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Shortwave and Longwave Energy

Figure 4.11

Page 19: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Radiation Balance Equation

Figure 4.15

Radiation Balance Equation:

Rn = Qsun(1-α) + Lair-Learth

Every term on the right hand side is radiation. This is the net energy available for all other biophysical processes. Many environmental problems can be explain with this equation.

1. Snow melting at high latitudes: lowers α, thus warms the planet.

2. Increase CO2, increase Lair, warms the planet.

Page 20: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Surface Energy Balance Equation

Figure 4.15

Energy Balance Equation:

Rn = LE + H +G +A

On an daily or longer time basis

Rn = LE + H

Radiation balance equation tells us how much energy is available, these energy can be converted into various forms depending on usage:

1. The evaporate water, storage in water vapor as latent heat (LE) .2. Heat the ground surface and then passing to the surrounding air through convection (H) .3. Heat the ground surface and then passing to lower layer through conduction (G).4. Used by plants in photosynthesis and store energy in chemical bonds (A).

Page 21: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Earth–Atmosphere Radiation/Energy Balance

Figure 4.12

Page 22: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Energy Balance at Earth’s Surface

Daily Radiation Patterns  

Simplified Surface Energy Balance  

The Urban Environment

Page 23: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Systems View of Daily Surface Energy

Figure 4.14

Reservoir: Total Energy Storage Nearly Ground

Inflows: Shortwave Radiation from the sun longwave from atmosphere

Outflow: Shortwave reflected Longwave outgoing

Relationship:R(t)=R(t-1)+ inflows -outflow

Inflows

outflow

Page 24: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Daily Radiation Curves

Figure 4.14

Page 25: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Simplified Surface Energy BalanceNET R =

+SW (insolation)

–SW (reflection)

+LW (infrared)

–LW (infrared)

Figure 4.16

Page 26: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Global NET R

Figure 4.17

Page 27: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Global Latent Heat

Figure 4.18

Page 28: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Global Sensible Heat

Figure 4.19

Page 29: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Radiation Budgets

Figure 4.20

El Mirage, CA

Pitt Meadows,BC

Page 30: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

The Urban Environment

Figure 4.21

Page 31: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Urban Heat Island

Figure 4.22

Page 32: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Urban Heat

IslandPilot

Project

Figure 4.23

Page 33: Chapter 4 Atmosphere and Surface Energy Balances

Robert W. ChristophersonCharlie Thomsen

Geosystems 7eAn Introduction to Physical Geography

End of Chapter 4