Tuesday, January 19, 2010

The Greenhouse Effect

When we wrote the first draft of this post, every explanation for the greenhouse effect that we had found on the web contradicted either the second law of thermodynamics, or the laws of black body radiation, or our own laboratory experiments. At first we thought these contradictions meant that the greenhouse effect did not exist, and we were not alone in coming to this conclusion. Our initial title for this post was "Refutation of the Greenhouse Effect". But we were mistaken. The greenhouse effect is a simple phenomenon that occurs when we have the correct planetary surface and atmosphere.

The greenhouse effect is the "heating of the surface of a planet or moon due to the presence of an atmosphere containing gases that absorb and emit infrared radiation." In the context of the theory, these gases are called greenhouse gases. In the case of Earth's atmosphere, the greenhouse gases include water vapor, carbon dioxide, and methane. As we described in A Radiation Experiment, most of the heat arriving from the Sun is of wavelength less than 2 μm, while most of the radiation emitted by the Earth is of wavelength greater than 2 μm. Greenhouse gases, water vapor in particular, absorb a small fraction of the radiation arriving from the Sun, but a large fraction of the radiation emitted by the Earth.

Suppose the atmosphere consisted only of nitrogen, oxygen, and argon. These gases are transparent to both the Sun's and the Earth's radiation. As we showed in Radiative Symmetry, transparent gas cannot radiate heat. So an atmosphere of nitrogen, oxygen, and argon would not radiate heat. There would be no radiation of heat into space by the upper atmosphere. Without such radiation, the atmosphere would be calm and still, and its temperature uniform.

Suppose we now add greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. These gases provide a means for the atmosphere to radiate into space the heat it acquires from the surface of the Earth. Convection is the dominant source of atmospheric heating near the Earth's surface. But radiation is a significant source of heat transfer between layers of the atmosphere. The Second Law of Thermodynamics dictates that all gases are exactly as effective at radiating heat as they are at absorbing heat. The Second Law further dictates that no gas can distinguish between the heat it acquired by absorption of radiation and the heat it acquired by convection. Because of greenhouse gases, a packet of air in the upper atmosphere radiates heat into space. It cools. As it cools, it becomes more dense. It sinks back to Earth. A new packet of warm air rises to take its place. As air rises, it expands and cools, but it is the cooling by radiation at the top of the atmosphere that drives the circulation of air between the lower and upper atmosphere. This radiating atmosphere is turbulent and cooler at the top than the bottom.

Suppose we warm a brass disk with an incandescent lamp and cover the disk with a film of water that cannot evaporate. Does the water film cause the disk to warm up or cool down? In A Radiation Experiment and The Cling-Film Diaper we showed that the disk cools down. It cools down because the water film is a far more effective infrared radiator than brass. Water vapor is also an effective radiator of infrared, and there is plenty of water vapor in the Earth's atmosphere. If the Earth were made of brass, water vapor in the atmosphere would allow the Earth to radiate heat more effectively, and so would act to lower the temperature of the Earth, not warm it up. But the Earth is not made of brass. Two thirds of it is covered with water. Unlike brass, the oceans are excellent radiators of heat.

Consider a planet, such as the Earth, that is covered for the most part with oceans and yet somehow, for the sake of argument, has an atmosphere that is transparent to both the sun's and the ocean's radiation (that is to say, the atmosphere contains no water vapor, despite being covered with water). The ocean will warm up in the light of the sun until it reaches a certain temperature, Tt. The atmosphere will warm up to the same temperature through its contact with the ocean. At this temperature, the ocean is radiating as much heat as it receives from the sun. The atmosphere, being transparent, radiates no heat. The upper regions of the atmosphere do not radiate heat. They do not cool down. The atmosphere's temperature is uniformly Tt, and the atmosphere is calm.

We now add water vapor to the atmosphere, which will occur naturally through evaporation from the oceans, provided Tt is high enough. And let us assume, again for the sake of argument, that there are no clouds formed from this water vapor, even though this is an unrealistic assumption. The water vapor makes the atmosphere opaque to radiation from the ocean, but the atmosphere remains transparent to radiation from the sun. The radiating surface of the planet is no longer the ocean, but the upper reaches its humid atmosphere. It is the upper atmosphere that must be at temperature Tt in order to radiate heat at the same rate that the ocean is absorbing heat from the sun. Of course, the upper atmosphere was already at Tt before we added the water vapor, so its temperature does not change. Now we must consider how the heat that the ocean absorbs from the sun will get to the upper atmosphere, where it can be radiated into space. According to the Second Law of Thermodynamics, the ocean will have to be warmer than the upper atmosphere in order for heat to flow to the upper atmosphere. Thus the ocean warms up to some new temperature Tg > Tt, and it is this warming that is called The Greenhouse Effect.

UPDATE [01-JAN-16] Of course, it is unrealistic to suppose that any atmosphere containing water vapor, and radiating heat into space, will contain no clouds. The warm air rising from the surface of the Earth expands as it rises, because its pressure drops. As it expands, it cools down. As it cools down, its water vapor condense into clouds. A thick cloud can reflect 90% of the sun's radiation. If the Earth were to be covered by thick clouds, its surface would cool dramatically. We calculate it would cool by almost 100°C. But if the Earth cooled by 100°C, there would be very little evaporation from the frozen oceans, and therefore insufficient water vapor in the atmosphere to cover the planet with thick clouds. We see that the Earth cannot be too warm, for it would then be covered by clouds and it would cool down, nor can it be too cold, for it would then have a clear sky and warm up. The result is that the Earth's surface settles to temperature at which cooling by clouds is in equilibrium with warming by the sun and by the greenhouse effect. We explore this equilibrium with calculations and simulations in our later posts.

6 comments:

  1. I have a basic question because I think I am missing a crucial point you are making. I don't have a background in thermodynamics, so please pardon the simplicity of my question.

    If the atmosphere is transparent to radiation, it seems like it would not excite atoms in the atmosphere (i.e., warm them up), but instead radiate out of the atmosphere and into space. But you say a transparent atmosphere would be warm all of the way through. Can you help me understand what I am missing?

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  2. I'm not certain I understand your question, but I will attempt a clarification.

    A transparent gas does not radiate heat, see earlier post Radiative Symmetry. A transparent atmosphere cannot radiate heat into space. It cannot lose heat into space by convection or conduction either. Outer space acts as a perfect insulator for heat contained in a transparent atmosphere.

    Heat enters the transparent atmosphere only by convection at the planet surface. Hot air rises. Moving air mixes. Eventually the upper atmosphere will be as warm as the lower atmosphere.

    Suppose you had an air chamber that was perfectly-insulated on all faces except one, and on this exposed face you put a hot plate. The hot plate will warm the air until all the air was at the same temperature as the hot plate. By assumption, no heat can escape from the perfectly-insulated walls. A transparent atmosphere's equilibrium with the planet surface is the same. The vacuum of space is a perfect insulator for the transparent atmosphere because a transparent gas cannot radiate heat. It's this fact, that a transparent gas does not radiate heat, that is overlooked by the Greenhouse Effect Theory.

    Air around a glowing hot fire does not glow. Air above molten magma does not glow. Dry air is transparent to visible light, and so cannot radiate visible light, no matter how hot it gets.

    If I have missed your point, please let me know.

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  3. Hi Kevan,
    If we want to confront the CO2 paradigm head on perhaps we need to look at it in the same terms that IPCC (and, I think, Real Climate) do. The essence of the paradigm is the concept of 'radiative forcing' as defined for instance on p133 of IPCC WG1 2007 (derived from Ramaswamy, 2001):
    "...the change in net (down minus up) irradiance (solar plus longwave; in W per meter squared) at the tropopause after allowing for stratospheric temperatures to re-adjust to radiative equilibrium, but with surface and tropospheric temperatures and state held fixed at the unperturbed values".
    This may read like mumbo-jumbo, but a more fundamental criticism is that it makes the entire AGW paradigm dependent on a thought experiment, which has no chance of being tested experimentally.
    What I understand them to mean is that if you add more GHG (or other forcing) to the atmosphere it pushes the mean altitude h of net radiation to space upwards a bit, but this net radiation is still at the same temperature as before. They then assume that the lapse rate does not vary, so that raises the temperature of the surface.
    In effect they seem (understandably perhaps) to be abandoning calculations based on absorption and re-emission of radiation from the ground and replacing them with hypothetical calculations based on changes in net emissions to space. Little attention has been given by climate sceptics to this change in emphasis.
    I find this part of the AGW theory an unsatisfactory basis for a whole branch of science to depend on. In Popperian terms it has so many assumptions as to be almost unfalsifiable. To claim infallibility for it is verging on pseudo-science.
    There is a germ of real science there, but there are too many adjustable parameters to make it a useful tool for serious study of climate change.
    Hugh

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  4. Dear Hugh,

    I agree with you. That is to say, after a few hours of thought last night, and discussion with my intrepid wife, I came to two conclusions. First, there is such a thing as a Greenhouse Effect on a water-covered planet, no matter how absurd the popular explanations for the effect might be. Second, the AGW theory is based upon an an absurd explanation for the Greenhouse Effect.

    So, I intend to work towards a Refutation of AGW in the next week or so. Of course, it is entirely likely that I'll have to retract my refutation after that, but I think we will arrive at the truth in the end, and that's the main thing.

    Thank you for your attention and for your suggestions.

    Yours, Kevan

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  5. Hi Kevan, have only just found your site and am slowly wending my way through. Like your explanation above @January 20, 2010 9:25 AM. Have been trying to explain in layman terms that GHGs cool the atmosphere and find your explanation easy to put across to other laymen. Thanks. My usual username is Richard111. I have posted a link to this site here: http://www.globalwarmingskeptics.info/thread-249-post-12066.html#pid12066

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  6. Welcome to the site, Richard111, and thank you for your flattering remarks. I hope you will feel free to ask questions in the comments.

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