Title: Seasons
1Seasons
2Older ideas
- Demeter and Persephone
- Tatiana and Maub
3Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall
4Tilt of Earth
- Earths spin axis (north/south axis) is tilted 23
½ degrees relative to a normal to the earths
orbital plane around the sun.
5Angle of Sun
- Sun is source of earths energy input.
- Earth is a sphere, so angle to sun is a function
of the latitude (and time of day). - Angle to sun determines how much the suns beam
is spread out on surface
6Low Solar Angle
- When sun is low in sky, beam of energy is spread
out over a larger area, so a unit area gets less
energy than when sun is high in sky. - Because earth is a sphere, areas near the poles
have a lower sun angle, and less energy input. - With less energy input, poles are colder.
7Earths Tilt
- The earths tilt causes the suns position to
change during the year. Sun is high in sky in
summer and lower in winter. Daylight length is
longer in summer and shorter in winter
8Northern/Southern Hemisphere
- Tilt toward sun in Northern Hemisphere is tilt
away from sun in Southern Hemisphere. - Summer in Northern Hemisphere is winter in
Southern Hemisphere.
9Length of Day
- Change in earths tilt will change the length of
the day with the change in season. - Longer day will allow for more solar input.
Summer in northern Alaska. Time series of photos
near midnight.
10Total Solar Radiation at the Top of the
Atmosphere
11Solar Radiation at Earths Surface
- Atmosphere and clouds will reflect solar
radiation. Thicker atmosphere will reflect more
solar radiation. - Effective cloud cover will increase with lower
sun angle because of reflections from sides of
clouds. - Net effect is to reduce input solar radiation in
polar regions.
Solar radiation on June 21.
12Distance from Sun
- Earth has an elliptical orbit. Earth is closer to
sun in January and farther out in July. - Earth receives slightly more energy (6) from sun
in January as compared to July. - Makes NH winters slightly warmer than would be
otherwise.
13Precession of Equinox
- In 13,000 years the Northern Hemisphere will
receive 6 less energy during winter because of
precession of equinox. - One of the causes of ice ages
14Net Energy Budget Positive (reds) will warm
negative (blues) will cool
Radiation budget forces seasonal changes.
15Annual Energy Budget
- Tropics receive surplus of energy poles receive
a deficit. - Heat transport from tropics to poles.
16Heat Transport
- Ocean currents
- North/south winds
- Latent heat loss in evaporation and gain in
precipitation.
17Seasonal Temperature Variations
18Control of Seasonal Temperature Variations
- Seasonal temperature variations controlled by net
energy input/loss, heat transport, and heat
capacity (heat storage).
19Net energy input/loss
- North/south variation in energy input is small in
summer and large in winter. - North/south temperature variations less in summer
than in winter.
20Clouds Influence Energy Input
- Clouds reflect visible light, trap infrared
energy. - Low clouds reflect more energy than they trap.
- High cirrus clouds trap more infrared energy than
the reflected solar energy.
21Specific Heat of Substances
22Daily Temperature Variations
- Daytime warming
- Nocturnal Inversions
23Land/Water Seasonal Variations
- Water has larger heat capacity than land.
- Water has less annual temperature variations than
land for same latitude.
Average air temperature near sea level in
January in degrees F.
24Variation in Annual Temperature
San Franciscos temperature is influenced by
nearby ocean
25Ocean Current Transport of Heat
- Gulf Stream transports warm water north into
North Atlantic and warms western Europe.
26Heating Degree Days
- 65 oF.-Mean Daily Temperature
- Used to size heating equipment
Mean annual total heating degree-days in
thousands of F, where the number 4 on the map
represents 4000 (base 65F).
27Cooling Degree Days
- Mean daily temperature 65 oF.
- Used to size cooling equipment
Mean annual total cooling degree-days in
thousands of F, where the number 1 on the map
represents 1000 (base 65F).
28Summary
- Angle of sun determines energy input.
- Spherical shape of earth causes equator to
receive more solar energy than poles. - Earth has a 23 ½ degree tilt of its spin axis
relative to the plane of the earths orbit around
the sun. - Tilt causes seasonal variation in input solar
energy.
29Summary (cont)
- Tilt causes change in length of day.
- Elliptical shape of earths orbit causes earth to
be slightly closer to sun in January. - Annual heat budget of earth has tropic having an
excess of energy and the poles a deficit. - Heat transport by ocean currents, winds, and
latent heat.
30Summary (cont2)
- Seasonal temperature variations controlled by net
energy input/loss, heat transport, and heat
capacity (heat storage). - North/south input energy variation more in winter
than in summer. - Water has larger heat capacity than land causing
less annual temperature variations. - Ocean currents keep Europe warm during winter.
31Summary (cont3)
- Heating Degree day.
- Cooling Degree day.