1.3 energy and equilibria Flashcards
first law of thermodynamics
energy can neither be created nor destroyed, but only transformed
entropy
increase in disorder and randomness in a system
second law of thermodynamics
entropy of a system increases over time; the only way to avoid entropy is by adding additional energy continuously
what does an increase in entropy mean?
a decline in the amount of energy available to do work
negative feedback
- counteracts change and work to return a system to a state of equilibrium
- temp increases –> more evaporation –> more cloud formation –> increases albedo
positive feedback
- amplifies change and moves a system away from a state of equilibrium
- ice melts –> lower ocean albedo –> more solar energy
daisy world model
- negative feedback loop
- white daisies reflect heat, atmosphere colder, die because it’s too cold –> black daisies absorb heat, atmosphere warmer, die because it’s too warm
- more white daisies –> high albedo –> lower temp –> more black daisies –> lower albedo –> higher temp
albedo
measure of % of light reflected
steady state system
- inputs/outputs remain roughly balanced
- system exists within certain set parameters, fluctuating between them
- if inputs/outputs vary too much, system is overwhelmed and positive feedback pushes it over a tipping point + into a new steady state
snowball earth
- runaway ice house effect
- more glaciers –> more albedo –> more sun energy reflected –> lower temp
case study - cloral bleaching
- great barrier reef, australia
- release harmful chemicals as a stress response
- reefs can recover but because of the frequency it prevents the recovery process –> tipping point, coral death
- corals die –> more algae –> less O2 levels
ecosystem stability + factors affecting it
- different ecosystems have different abilities to maintain their equilibrium
- climate, biodiversity, and frequency of disturbance
resistant ecosystems
maintain ‘business as usual’ in response to a disturbance: negative feedback maintains conditions within a dynamic equilibria
resiliant ecosystems
initially impacted by a disturbance, but are able to return to a steady state afterwards