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Title: Introduction to Meteorology Evolution and Composition of the


1
Introduction to MeteorologyEvolution and
Composition of the atmosphere
  • Leila M. V. Carvalho

2
In the beginning
4.5 billion years ago formation of our solar
system from gas and dust (nebula) generated from
supernova explosion
http//www.aerospaceweb.org/question/astronomy/q02
47.shtml
3
THE SOLAR SYSTEM
4
PLANETS OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM NOT TO SCALE
TERRESTRIAL PLANETS (OR ROCKY PLANETS)
Earth
Venus
Mars
Mercury
GAS PLANETS (OR JOVIAL PLANETS)
Neptune
Jupiter
Saturn
Uranus
5
Earth first atmosphere
  • The original atmosphere was primarily helium (He)
    and hydrogen (H).
  • Heat from the still-molten crust, the sun, and a
    probably enhanced solar wind, dissipated this
    atmosphere.
  • Gravity is important to keep an atmosphere. H, He
    have low molecular weight and may have achieved
    the escape velocity (the velocity necessary to
    escape gravity)
  • Other explanations gases would have been removed
    by collision between the growing Earth and other
    large bodies (failed planets). The tremendous
    energy released may have ejected the early
    atmosphere
  • This theory explains the origin of the Moon and
    the tilting of the Earth axis to 23o
  • (http//www.psrd.hawaii.edu/Dec98/OriginEarthMoon.
    html)

Artist impression of the giant impact that
created the Moon. The sizes of the proto-Earth
and the impactor are comparable with the results
of computer simulations from the 90's. More
recent simulations show the Earth-Moon system
could also have resulted from a relatively
smaller impactor
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth27s_atmosphere
Evolution_of_Earth.27s_atmosphere
6
The second atmosphere 4.4 billion years ago
  • About 4.4 billion years ago, the surface had
    cooled enough to form a crust.
  • Many volcanoes released steam, carbon dioxide,
    and ammonia. This led to the early "second
    atmosphere", which was primarily carbon dioxide
    and water vapor, with some nitrogen but virtually
    no oxygen.
  • Additional water was imported by collisions,
    probably with asteroids ejected from the
    asteroid belt under the influence of Jupiter's
    gravity.
  • As it cooled much of the carbon dioxide was
    dissolved in the seas and precipitated out as
    carbonates.
  • Simulations run at the University of Waterloo and
    University of Colorado suggest that it may have
    had up to 40 hydrogen.
  • It is generally believed that the greenhouse
    effect, caused by high levels of carbon dioxide
    and methane, kept the Earth from freezing.

Early Earth - The First Billion Years Lava
flowing from Earth's partially molten interior
spread over the Earth's surface and solidified to
form a thin crust, the rain evaporating on
contact with the hot ground. As the temperature
dropped, the oceans formed.
7
Life and the formation of the third atmosphere
  • cyanobacteriaS existed approximately 3.3 billion
    years ago and were the first oxygen-producing
    evolving phototropic organisms.
  • They were responsible for the initial conversion
    of the Earth's atmosphere from an anoxic state to
    an oxic state (that is, from a state without
    oxygen to a state with oxygen) during the period
    2.7 to 2.2 billion years ago.
  • They were the first to carry out oxygenic
    photosynthesis, and were able to produce oxygen
    while sequestering carbon dioxide in organic
    molecules, playing a major role in oxygenating
    the atmosphere. This is often referred to as the
    Oxygen Catastrophe. (oxygen was toxic to the
    microscopic anaerobic organisms dominant then.)
  • The increase in the concentration of oxygen in
    the atmosphere required time because iron and
    other elements in the Earth's crust reacted with
    oxygen, removing it from the atmosphere.

Cyanobacterias
8
The third atmosphere
  • Photosynthesizing plants later evolved and
    continued releasing oxygen and sequestering
    carbon dioxide.
  • As oxygen was released, it reacted with ammonia
    to release nitrogen.
  • Bacteria also converted ammonia (NH3) into
    nitrogen, but most of the nitrogen currently in
    the atmosphere resulted from sunlight-powered
    photolysis of ammonia
  • As more plants appeared, the levels of oxygen
    increased significantly, while carbon dioxide
    levels dropped.
  • At first the oxygen combined with various
    elements, but eventually oxygen accumulated in
    the atmosphere, contributing to Cambrian
    explosion and further evolution.

Cambrian Period 543-490 Million Yrs
Siberia
Laurentia
Gondwana
Baltica
9
Oxygen increases The ozone layer is formed, life
can migrate to the continents
  • With the appearance of an ozone layer life-forms
    were better protected from ultraviolet radiation.
    - life over continents (450 mi years ago)
  • Between 200 and 250 million years ago, up to 35
    of the atmosphere was oxygen (as found in bubbles
    of ancient atmosphere preserved in amber).
  • This modern atmosphere has a composition which is
    enforced by oceanic blue-green algae as well as
    geological processes.

Ancient Amphibians http//news.nationalgeographic
.com/news/bigphotos/10940810.html
10
http//www.chem.arizona.edu/prise/w8/historylife2.
pdf
  • O2 does not remain naturally free in an
    atmosphere but tends to be consumed by inorganic
    chemical reactions, and by animals, bacteria, and
    even land plants at night. CO2 tends to be
    produced by respiration and decomposition and
    oxidation of organic matter.

11
  • O2 would vanish within a few million years by
    chemical reactions, and CO2 dissolves in water
    and would be gone in millennia if not replaced.
    Both are maintained by biological productivity
    and geological forces seemingly working
    hand-in-hand to maintain reasonably steady levels
    over millions of years.

12
PRESENT ATMOSPHERE BEFORE THE INDUSTRIAL
REVOLUTION
O221
N2 78
per volume
Water vapor H2O 0-4 (Variable) Carbon
dioxide CO2 0.03 (Variable)
13
Steady state and residence time definitions
14
Steady state and residence time
Consider a gas that is constantly being cycled
between the atmosphere and the Earths surface
physical processes (volcanic eruptions,
biological processes, etc) or by chemical
processes (reaction between gases). If we
consider the atmosphere as a reservoir for this
gas, the concentration of the gas will remain
constant so long as the input rate output rate
concentration of the gas is in a steady state.
Individual molecules stay in the atmosphere for
only a finite period of time before they are
removed by whatever output processes are active.
The average length of time that individual
molecules of a given substance remain in the
atmosphere is called the residence time
These two figures are schematically showing gases
with high and low residence time. If arrows are
indicating the rate that a substance enters and
exits the atmosphere in a steady state, which
figure represents the long residence time?
15
Permanent and variable gases in the atmosphere
Constitute approximately 99.999 of the
atmosphere and occur in nearly constant
proportion throughout the atmospheres lowest
80km HOMOSPHERE What does it mean?
16
How to compute the residence time?
  • Divide the mass of the substance in the
    atmosphere (in kilograms) by the rate at which
    the substance enters and exits the atmosphere (in
    kilograms per year).

Consider a box or reservoir
Fout
m X
L
D
i.e.
t Residence time (yr) m mass (kg) FoutFlux
outside the volume (or reservoir) L chemical
loss (kg/yr) of m converting into X D
Deposition (kg/yr)
  • Thus everything else being equal, gases that are
    rapidly exchanged between Earths surface and the
    atmosphere have brief residence times, as do
    gases that have relatively low atmospheric
    concentrations.

17
Example
  • The mass of nitrogen in the atmosphere is 4 x
    1018 kg, and its sinks from the atmosphere
    include (i) biological nitrogen fixation by
    bacteria, 2 x 1011 kg yr-1 (ii) production of NO
    in thunderstorms, 7 x 1010 yr-1 (iii) chemical
    synthesis of ammonia, 5 x 1010 kg yr-1 (all data
    refer to loss of nitrogen). Calculate the
    residence time of nitrogen in the atmosphere.

18
Water Vapor
19
Water vapor from satellite
20
Water vapor
  • Water vapor is not the same as droplets it is a
    gas
  • Main source evaporation
  • Concentration decreases rapidly with altitude
  • Most atmospheric water vapor lowest 5km (3mi) of
    the atmosphere in quantities the vary from 1-4
  • Outside tropics it does not exceed 2
  • It is constantly cycled between the planet and
    the atmosphere in the so called hydrological
    cycle.
  • Water evaporates from river, oceans lakes, ice
    sheets, and underground water (removed from the
    soil sometimes by vegetation)

21
Question to discuss with your partner
  • What in your opinion is the most important role
    of tropical rainforests such as the Amazon forest
    (justify your answer)
  • A) contribution for the Earth input of O2
  • B) contribution for input H2O vapor
  • C) (A) and (B) are correct
  • D) Neither (A) or (B) is correct

22
Carbon dioxide
  • CO2 currently accounts for about 0.038 of the
    atmospheres volume.
  • When a gas occupies such a small proportion of
    the atmosphere, we often express its content as
    part per million (ppm) - today 380 ppm.
  • Sources plant, animal respiration, decay of
    organic material, volcanic eruptions, natural
    anthropogenic (human produced) combustion.
  • CO2 is removed by photosynthesis by plants
  • CO2 gas a residence time of about 150 yrs.

How do you explain the cycles observed for CO2?
23
6.3
-2.3
-2.3
1.6
3.3 GtC
Metric ton 1,000 kilograms (2,205 pounds) Unity
of flux metric ton/year Gigatons 109 ton 1012
kg
24
Methane CH4
  • about 3.5 billion years agothere was 1,000 times
    as much methane in the atmosphere as there is
    now. The earliest methane was released into the
    atmosphere by volcanic activity.
  • With life and increase in O2 methane decreased
    (reaction with OH).
  • With industrialization the rate of increase
    accelerated so that values have more than doubled
    over the last 200yrs ( 1.7 ppm in 1999)
  • The residence time for methane is about 10 yrs.
  • The current input of CH4 is approximately equal
    to its natural removal
  • CH4 is a very efficient greenhouse gas

Less industrial production and decrease of wet
lands (drought)
25
Hum it seems something else happened these past
years that might change the trends observed
before and potentially cause a climate shift (if
persisted).
From the following article A sleeping
giant? Nature Reports Climate Change (2009)
Published online 5 March 2009 doi10.1038/climate
.2009.24
Could this increase be because methane has been
released in the atmosphere because global warming
has released the methane that was trapped under
the permafrost? If that is true, the increase of
methane, an efficient greenhouse gas, might
increase global warming and cause important
climate shifts
The average atmospheric concentration of methane
shot up suddenly in 2007, having remained stable
for a decade. Data shown are from the Advanced
Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment and the
Australian Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial
Research Organisation, courtesy of Matt Rigby
http//www.nature.com/climate/2009/0904/full/clima
te.2009.24.html
26
What is greenhouse effect?
CO2, CH4, H20
IR - heat
UV, VIS
27
Ozone O3
  • Ozone is observed in the stratosphere (above
    20km) and in the troposphere (below 12 km)
  • In the stratosphere 25km at concentration of
    15ppm (that is 15 out of every one million
    molecules is ozone), is essential for life on
    Earth!
  • In the lower atmosphere occur in highly polluted
    urban areas and association with forest burning.
    Can cause irritation to lungs, eyes, and damage
    to vegetation.
  • Concentration in polluted urban areas up to 0.15
    ppm (that is, 15 out of every 100 million
    molecules are ozone)

28
(No Transcript)
29
But how is ozone formed in the stratosphere
?http//www.ccpo.odu.edu/SEES/ozone/oz_class.htm

NASA
2. Ozone and oxygen atoms are continuously being
interconverted as solar UV breaks ozone and the
oxygen atmom reacts with another oxygen molecule
(FAST)
1. Oxygen molecules are photolyzed, yielding 2
oxygen atoms (SLOW)
O2
This interconversion process converts UV
radiation into Thermal energy, heating the
stratosphere
3. Ozone is lost by the reaction of the oxygen
atom or the ozone molecule with each other, or
some other trace gas such as chorine (SLOW)
30
Typical reaction in the Stratosphere
UV solar radiation ? 240nm (wave length ) h
Plank Constant c speed of light
1) Production of free oxygen
O2 hc/? --gt O O
O3 hc/? --gt O2 O O O2 M --gt O3 M The
M is another molecule (typically N2 or O2, the
two most abundant molecules in the atmosphere).
It carries away the extra energy of this
reaction. This process of absorption is an
extremely efficient, ultraviolet radiation is
effectively screened out before it reaches
Earth's surface.
What happens if Chlorine , Bromine or Fluor (more
reactive) take part in this reaction?
O2 hc/? --gt O O ClO O --gt O2 Cl Cl
O3 --gt O2 ClO
Ex ClO (chlorine monoxide)
Net O3 O3 --gt 3 O2
31
Discussion
WHY THE O3 PEAK IS OBSERVED AROUND 30Km AND NOT
ABOVE, WHERE SOLAR RADIATION IS HIGHER, OR
BELOW, WHERE THE DENSITY OF O2 IS HIGHER?
Did you know that Dobson Unit (DU) is a measure
of the "thickness" of the ozone layer? Imagine
that all of the overhead ozone molecules (spread
over the depth of the stratosphere) could be
brought down to the surface (at standard
temperature and pressure). This "layer" of ozone
would only be about 3 millimeters (mm) thick,
equivalent to the height of two stacked pennies.
This amount of ozone has a Dobson Unit value of
300 DU (approximately the global average of total
ozone).
32
But what is the ozone hole? Why does it occur?
Is it caused by natural or is it anthropogenic
induced ?
O2
LOW
HIGH OZONE
33
During the winter of the SH polar regions do not
receive solar radiation and therefore by the
beginning of the spring there is a minimum in the
stratospheric ozone. (therefore, the minimum
ozone is a natural feature)
However, remember that if chlorine, bromine or
flour are present, then when free oxygen that
begins to form during spring, combines with these
components. The result is less total ozone and
the increase in the ozone hole over polar
stratosphere
34
Aerosols
  • Definition small solid particles and liquid
    droplets in the air (excluding cloud droplets and
    precipitation).
  • Can be formed by human or natural processes.
  • Normal concentration 10,000 particles per cubic
    centimeter over land surface ( 17,000 particles
    per cubic inch)
  • Size below 0.1 µm (Aitken nuclei)
  • 0.1 1.0 µm (large particle)
  • gt 1 µm giant particle

Fine aerosols
Coarse aerosols
35
Effects in the atmosphere and society
Dust Storm Texas 1935
Smog in NY city
Caused by burning of fossil fuels, coal and
industrial activity Reduce visibility, solar
radiation at the surface, Serious impacts on
health
Reduce visibility, solar radiation at the
surface, Serious impacts on health
36
Did you know?
On average, each breath a person takes brings
into the lungs about 1000cm3 (1 liter, or 64in.3)
of air. Given the average size and concentration
of aerosols, each of us draws about 1 trillion
aerosols into our lungs several times each
minute, or about two table spoons of solid each
day!
37
Discussions and conclusions
  • Earth had three atmospheres the composition of
    the third one is completely linked to the
    existence of life in our planet 21 O2 and 78 N2
  • The ozone layer formed only recently ( 7 mi yrs)
  • Green house gases have been important to maintain
    the temperature of earth above freezing.
  • Human activity has increased the amount of
    greenhouse gases in the atmosphere
  • The ozone hole is a natural feature of the
    atmosphere. Its increase over time is due to
    human activity (input of chlorine and bromine
    that reacts with free oxigen)
  • Aerosols are important component of the
    atmosphere (they may be of natural sources or
    human produced)

38
Training a few concepts
39
How was the 2010 SH ozone hole compared with
previous years?
40
http//www.esrl.noaa.gov/gmd/dv/spo_oz/spototal.ht
ml
Record low October 1993 Pinatubo released more
Chlorine in the atmosphere
41
Important concepts
  • Ultraviolet radiation is divided into three
    components UV-A (315 to 400 nm), UV-B (280 to
    315 nm) and UV-C (less than 280 nm). The shorter
    wavelengths that comprise UV-B are the most
    dangerous portion of UV radiation that can reach
    ground level
  • Atmospheric ozone shields life at the surface
    from most of the UV-B and almost all of the UV-C
  • All forms of UV radiation are reduced by cloud
    cover. Persistent lack of cloud cover in some
    regions (e.g. Australia and South Africa)
    increases the danger from UV radiation compared
    to similar latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere

42
Why do we observe values so close to zero here???
43
January 3, 2011 total ozone estimated by UV
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