Earth - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Earth

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Earth s Climate & Mankind Climate Long-term (years and longer) average condition of a region Rainfall or snowfall Snow and ice cover Temperature – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Earth


1
Earths Climate Mankind
  • Climate
  • Long-term (years and longer) average condition of
    a region
  • Rainfall or snowfall
  • Snow and ice cover
  • Temperature
  • Weather
  • Short-term (hours to weeks) fluctuations

2
Historical Examples of Climate Change?
  • Advance and retreat of glaciers
  • Alpine glaciers shrunk in 20th century
  • Thinning of ice on NW Greenland
  • See Nature v. 414, 60-62
  • Sea level rise
  • El Nino/La Nina oscillations
  • Length of growing season in Alaska increased from
    1950-2000
  • Decrease in Arctic sea ice cover from 1970-2000

3
How We Will Study Climate Change
4
Time Scales of Climate Change
5
Earths Climate System
  • Earths climate system
  • Air, water, land and vegetation
  • Changes in Earths climate system
  • Driven by cause and effect
  • Buzz words of climate scientists forcing and
    response
  • Forcing factors that drive or cause changes
  • Response the climate change that occurs

6
Earths Climate System and the Interactions of
its Components
7
Forcing Response
8
Climate Forcing
  • Tectonic Processes
  • Slow movement of plates affects climate only very
    slowly

9
Climate Forcing
  • Earth-Orbital Changes
  • Variations in earths orbit around the Sun affect
    the amount of solar radiation received on Earths
    surface. Orbital scale changes occur over tens
    to hundreds of thousands of years.

10
Climate Forcing
  • Changes in the Strength of the Sun
  • Affects the amount of solar radiation received on
    Earths surface. Can occur on long-term (100s
    of millions of years) or on short-term (10-1000s
    years)

11
Climate Forcing
  • Anthropogenic Forcing
  • Not part of the natural climate system
  • Affect of humans on climate
  • Byproduct of agricultural, industrial and other
    human activities
  • Example is addition materials to the atmosphere
    such as gases (CO2, N2O, etc.), sulfate particles
    and soot.

12
Response Time
  • Time it takes the climate system to react to a
    change in forcing (reaction time)

Response time amount of time it takes to get
50 of the way toward equilibrium
13
Response Time
  • Response curve exponential
  • System moves ½ the way to equilibrium with each
    passage of response time
  • Absolute amount of change decreases through time
    but proportional change towards equilibrium is
    constant

14
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15
Time Scale of Forcing vs. Response
  • Forcing is slow compared to response
  • Climate system tracks forcing
  • Typical of climate change on tectonic time scales

16
Time Scale of Forcing vs. Response
  • Forcing is fast compared to response
  • Little response to climate forcing
  • Stochastic events with short-lived response

17
Time Scale of Forcing vs. Response
  • Time scale of forcing response time
  • Yields dynamic and realistic response

Frequency of forcing has a direct effect on the
magnitude of the response
The time scale of forcing is not long enough to
allow the system to reach equilibrium
18
Cyclic Forcing and Response
  • Natural climate forcing may vary in a cyclic
    fashion producing cyclic response
  • Response time same forcing is changing

19
Cyclic Forcing and Response
  • Since forcing is constantly changing, equilibrium
    value of system also changes
  • Equilibration values set by the rate and
    direction of change of the forcing
  • Regardless of the forcing rate of change
  • Response rate of the system is is fastest when
    the system is furthest from equilibrium

20
Cyclic Forcing and Response
  • Frequency of forcing affects the amplitude of the
    response
  • Slower cycling produces a larger response more
    time to react
  • Faster cycling produces a smaller response less
    time to react

21
Cyclic Forcing and Response
  • Cycling forcing and response typical of
    Milankovitch type orbital cycles
  • Changes in incoming solar radiation due to
    changes in Earths orbit occur cyclically over
    tens of thousands of years
  • Response time of large glacial ice sheets also
    tens of thousands of years

22
Response Rates Interactions
  • Different components of the climate system have
    different response times
  • Different components will respond to a change in
    forcing at different rates

23
Response Rates Interactions
  • If climate forcing occurs in cycles, it will
    produce different cyclic responses in the climate
    system
  • Fast responses track forcing
  • Slow responses lag forcing

24
Response Rates Interactions
  • What happens to air temperature near the foot of
    the glacier if incoming solar radiation were to
    slowly increase?

25
Interactions in the Climate System
  • Does the air warm due to increase in solar
    luminosity?
  • Does the air stay cool because of the proximity
    to large mass of glacial ice?
  • Response time of air influenced by both
  • Response time of air will be faster than the
    response of the ice but lag behind forcing from
    the Sun

26
Interactions in the Climate System
  • Individual components within the climate system
    do not respond passively to forcing
  • Dynamic interaction between systems
  • Interaction blurs the distinction between forcing
    and response
  • Difficult to determine what system or systems are
    reacting to the forcing

27
Feedbacks in the Climate System
  • Interactions can produce positive feedback
  • Positive feedbacks produce additional climate
    change beyond that triggered by the initial
    forcing
  • Positive feedback amplify changes

28
Feedbacks in the Climate System
  • Interactions can produce negative feedback
  • Negative feedbacks reduce the response that would
    be caused by the forcing
  • Negative feedback suppress climate change
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