Greenhouse Effect.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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addition, humans cut down huge tracts of trees for lumber or to clear land for farming or building.
This process, known as deforestation, can both release the carbonstored in trees and significantly reduce the number of trees available to absorb carbon dioxide.
As a result of these human activities, carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is accumulating faster than Earth’s natural processes can absorb the gas.
By analyzing airbubbles trapped in glacier ice that is many centuries old, scientists have determined that carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere have risen by 35 percent since 1750.And since carbon dioxide increases can remain in the atmosphere for centuries, scientists expect these concentrations to double or triple in the next century if currenttrends continue.
C Methane
Many natural processes produce methane, also known as natural gas.
Decomposition of carbon-containing substances found in oxygen-free environments, such aswastes in landfills, release methane.
Ruminating animals such as cattle and sheep belch methane into the air as a byproduct of digestion.
Microorganisms that live indamp soils, such as rice fields, produce methane when they break down organic matter.
Methane is also emitted during coal mining and the production and transport ofother fossil fuels.
Methane has more than doubled in the atmosphere since 1750, and could double again in the next century.
Atmospheric concentrations of methane are far less thancarbon dioxide, and methane only stays in the atmosphere for a decade or so.
But methane is an extremely effective heat-trapping gas—one molecule of methane isnearly 30 times more efficient at trapping infrared radiation radiated from the Earth’s surface than a molecule of carbon dioxide.
D Nitrous Oxide
Nitrous oxide is released by the burning of fossil fuels, and automobile exhaust is a large source of this gas.
In addition, many farmers use nitrogen-containing fertilizersto provide nutrients to their crops.
When these fertilizers break down in the soil, they emit nitrous oxide into the air.
Plowing fields also releases nitrous oxide.
Since 1750 nitrous oxide has risen by 18 percent in the atmosphere.
Although this increase is smaller than for the other greenhouse gases, nitrous oxide traps heatabout 300 times more effectively than carbon dioxide and can stay in the atmosphere for a century.
E Ozone
Ozone is both a natural and human-made greenhouse gas.
Ozone in the upper atmosphere is known as the ozone layer and shields life on Earth from the Sun’s harmfulultraviolet radiation, which can cause cancer and other damage to plants and animals.
However, ozone in the lower atmosphere is a component of smog (a severe typeof air pollution) and is considered a greenhouse gas.
Unlike other greenhouse gases, which are well-mixed throughout the atmosphere, ozone in the lower atmospheretends to be limited to industrialized regions.
F Fluorinated Compounds
Some of the most potent greenhouse gases emitted are produced solely by human activities.
Fluorinated compounds, including CFCs and HCFCs, are used in a variety ofmanufacturing processes.
For each of these synthetic compounds, one molecule is several thousand times more effective in trapping heat than a single molecule ofcarbon dioxide.
CFCs, first synthesized in 1928, were widely used in the manufacture of aerosol sprays, blowing agents for foams and packing materials, as solvents, and asrefrigerants.
Nontoxic and safe to use in most applications, CFCs are harmless in the lower atmosphere.
However, in the upper atmosphere, ultraviolet radiation breaksdown CFCs, releasing chlorine into the atmosphere.
In the mid-1970s, scientists began observing that higher concentrations of chlorine were destroying the ozone layerin the upper atmosphere.
Beginning in 1987 with the Montréal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer, representatives from 47 countries establishedcontrol measures that limited the consumption of CFCs.
By 1992 the Montréal Protocol was amended to completely ban the manufacture and use of CFCs worldwide,except in certain developing countries and for use in special medical processes such as asthma inhalers.
Scientists devised substitutes for CFCs, including HCFCs, HFCs, and PFCs.
Since HCFCs still release ozone-destroying chlorine in the atmosphere, production of thischemical will be completely phased out by the year 2030.
Although HFCs and PFCs contain no chlorine and are not harmful to the ozone layer, they are neverthelesspowerful greenhouse gases.
Another synthetic chemical, sulfur hexafluoride, is one of the most potent greenhouse gases ever produced.
This synthetic gas compound has nearly 24,000 times thewarming effect as an equal amount of carbon dioxide.
However, it is released into the atmosphere in relatively small quantities.
IV OTHER FACTORS IN THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT
Aerosols, also known as particulates, are airborne particles that absorb, scatter, and reflect radiation back into space.
Clouds, windblown dust, and particles that can betraced to erupting volcanoes are examples of natural aerosols.
Human activities, including the burning of fossil fuels and slash-and-burn farming techniques used toclear forestland, contribute additional aerosols to the atmosphere.
Although aerosols are not considered a heat-trapping greenhouse gas, they do affect the transfer ofheat energy radiated from Earth to space.
The effect of aerosols on climate change is still debated, but scientists believe that light-colored aerosols have a coolingeffect, while dark aerosols like soot contribute to warming.
V UNDERSTANDING THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT
Although concern over the effect of increasing greenhouse gases is a relatively recent development, scientists have been investigating the greenhouse effect since theearly 1800s.
French mathematician and physicist Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier, while exploring how heat is conducted through different materials, was the first tocompare the atmosphere to a glass vessel in 1827.
Fourier recognized that the air around the planet lets in sunlight, much like a glass roof.
In the 1850s British physicist John Tyndall investigated the transmission of radiant heat through gases and vapors.
Tyndall found that nitrogen and oxygen, the twomost common gases in the atmosphere, had no heat-absorbing properties.
He then went on to measure the absorption of infrared radiation by carbon dioxide andwater vapor, publishing his findings in 1863 in a paper titled “On Radiation Through the Earth’s Atmosphere.”
Swedish chemist Svante August Arrhenius, best known for his Nobel Prize-winning work in electrochemistry, also advanced understanding of the greenhouse effect.
In1896 he calculated that doubling the natural concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would increase global temperatures by 4° to 6°C (7° to 11°F), acalculation that is not too far from today’s estimates using more sophisticated methods.
Arrhenius correctly predicted that when Earth’s temperature warms, watervapor evaporation from the oceans increases.
The higher concentration of water vapor in the atmosphere would then contribute to the greenhouse effect and global.
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