the thermostat hypothesis

28
The Thermostat Hypothesis Jesse Vannatta Major: Atmospheric Science

Upload: lael

Post on 23-Feb-2016

37 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

The Thermostat Hypothesis . Jesse Vannatta Major: Atmospheric Science. Articles Discussed. Thermodynamic regulation of ocean warming by cirrus clouds deduced from observations of the 1987 El Niño. V. Ramanthan & W. Collins. Nature Vol. 351 May 1991. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Thermostat Hypothesis

The Thermostat

Hypothesis

Jesse VannattaMajor: Atmospheric Science

Page 2: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Articles Discussed•Thermodynamic regulation of ocean warming by cirrus clouds deduced from observations of the 1987 El Niño. V. Ramanthan & W. Collins. Nature Vol. 351 May 1991.•The effect of environmental conditions on tropical deep convective systems observed from TRMM satellite. Bing Lin, Bruce A. Wielicki, Patrick Minnis, Lin Chambers, Kuan-Man Xu, and Yongxiang Hu. Journal of Climate Vol. 19 November 2006.

Page 3: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Thunderstorms, Get Excited! Australian Storm

Page 4: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Acronyms

DCS=Deep Convective SystemSST=Sea Surface Temperature

Page 5: The Thermostat Hypothesis

How to Make a Thunderstorm

3 Key Conditions…

1. Moisture

2. Instability

3. Lifting Mechanism

Page 6: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Key Features of Thunderstorms

Updrafts (Mesoscale and Convective) Downdrafts (Mesoscale and Convective) The storm reaches 12-18km at it’s peak When the downdrafts cut off the updrafts, the storm will start to die.

Page 7: The Thermostat Hypothesis

The ITCZ

The Northeast trades and the Southeast trades come together near the equator, which leads to surface convergence and lifting air.

ITCZ video

Page 8: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Thunderstorm Facts

•Men are 6 times more likely to be struck by lightning then women.•9 out of 10 people who are struck by lightning survive.•One lightning bolt has enough electricity to service 200,000 homes. •The Greeks fenced off spots that had been struck by lightning so that man would not trod on ground touched by Gods.•Lightning has been detected on Jupiter (also Venus) and while these strikes are less frequent then on the Earth, lightning on Jupiter can be up to 1,000 times as powerful as lightning on Earth.

Page 9: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Thermostat HypothesisRamanthan and Collins 1991

1987 El Niño Event Data based off of ERBE measurements (Earth

Radiation Budget Experiment) Thermostat Hypothesis: The presence of deep

convective storms over the Oceans act as a thermostat, limiting the sea surface temperatures to 305K.

Page 10: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Variables

Sc: incoming solar radiation

Cs: solar radiation reflected by clouds.

C1: longwave radiation trapped by clouds

Ga: Longwave radiation trapped by the atmosphere

Page 11: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Experiment 1

Greenhouse effect G=Ga+C1 increases sharply when SST>300K

SST increase atmospheric moisture increase Ga increase

C1 and Cs also increase with temperature.

Page 12: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Experiment 2Clouds always reflect more solar radiation with increasing SST

Data compares1987 el niño to 1985 normal conditions

Central and Eastern Pacific (region of max warming)

Month Year SST (K) dCs (W/m2)

April 1985 300.1 -341987 301.9February 1985 299.2

-321987 301

May 1985 300 -341987 301.7July 1985 299 -121987 301October 1985 298.6 -61987 300.3

Page 13: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Math!From these graphs we get:

dCs=-0.92 (dC1+dGa)

dCs=1.2(dC1)

dGa/dT=6.8Wm-2

So…

dCs/dT=-27Wm-2 and

dC1/dT=23Wm-2

Therefore: reflection of SW radiation is increasing more rapidly with temperature than the trapping of longwave radiation.

Page 14: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Summary of Ramanthan and Collins…(more math)

303K < SSTmax < 305K

In 1987 and 1983 El Niño events, SST did not exceed 305K Theory: The sun heats the Ocean, making the BL more

unstable. This creates DCSs, which block more solar radiation from reaching the ocean surface. This acts like a thermostat, capping the SST between 303 and 305K.

SSTmax = T0 + Sc +G0 −σT4( ) /β[ ]

β =4σT 3 − dGadT

− f dC1dT− dCsdT

Page 15: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Article 2Lin et al. Data (2006)

The Study Statistical analysis of DCS and

the environment around DCS Latitude: 30°N-30°S January August 1998 TRMM (Tropical Rainfall

Measuring Mission)1. CERES (Clouds and the Earth’s

Radiant Energy System scanner)2. VIRS (Visible and Infrared Sensor3. TMI (the TRMM microwave

imager)

Other data: ECMWF

Page 16: The Thermostat Hypothesis
Page 17: The Thermostat Hypothesis

What counts as DCS?

Looked for CPCCs (cold precipitating cloud clusters)

CPCCs: 1. At least one precipitating

pixel2. Thermal IR brightness

temperature TbIR < 245K3. Cloud top height above 6km

DCS: a CPCC with at least one rainfall cell with TbIR<218K

Page 18: The Thermostat Hypothesis

70,000 storms in 8 months!

Page 19: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Cloud Coverage

Page 20: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Precipitation

Page 21: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Back to the ITCZ

Study defines areas of convergence as SST > 299K

Page 22: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Relating this to the thermostat Hypothesis…

Page 23: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Summary

During DCS conditions less LW radiation escapes at the top of the atmosphere, and more SW radiation is reflected than under normal environmental conditions

As SST increases… Convergence increases DCS increases Areal coverage of DCS

increases Precipitation increases

Page 24: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Do they agree with Ramanthan and Collins?Yes, as SST increases there are more DCSs, with a greater areal coverage and more precipitation. They agreed that this will create a negative feedback, but not to the extent that Ramanthan and Collins suggested. When they did the calculations they came up with a less severe negative feedback. (Ramanthan and Collins suggested a net radiative feedback of -4Wm-2K-1 to -6Wm-2K-1, Lin et al suggested -1.75Wm-2K-1

Page 25: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Who cares about clouds and the SST

Climatologists do! The Ocean temperature is an integral part of climate change

Cloud feedbacks are an important factor in Earth’s energy balance, yet there is no general agreement on their climate feedbacks (especially for tropical deep convective systems)

Page 26: The Thermostat Hypothesis

My Opinions

•Can’t rely on this hypothesis to counteract global warming•More long range studies should be done, especially since Ramanthan and Collins, and Lin et al. found different magnitudes.

Page 27: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Happy Valentines Day

Page 28: The Thermostat Hypothesis

Sources

Fun Facts: http://www.angelfire.com/ca/Tornado/Facts.html http://www.funfactz.com/weather-facts/

Background Knowledge http://www.srh.noaa.gov/jetstream/tstorms/ingre

dient.htm