climate change Flashcards

1
Q

climate:

A

the long term average weather conditions for a location calculated over 30 years.

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2
Q

what’s the difference between weather and climate?

A

climate is what you expect, weather is what you get

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3
Q

what is climate change:

A

the long term shift in an areas climatic condition

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4
Q

what influences the earths temperature

A
  • insolation (varying, equatorial areas receive more insolation, whereas at the poles temp is lower)
  • seasonal change (Southern Hemisphere summer, is tilted towards the sun)
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5
Q

where does precipitation occur?

A
  • regions of rising moist air and low pressure
  • highest in the tropics near the equator
  • lowest in the poles as their is not enough moisture in the air
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6
Q

what natural systems drive the earths climate?

A
  • the heat budget and greenhouse effect
  • the hydrological cycle
  • the carbon cycle
  • atmospheric circulation
  • ocean currents
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7
Q

what is the heat budget?

A

the driving force of all climate systems. all heat and insolation received by the earth must be returned to space otherwise the world would heat up endlessly.

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8
Q

what is the natural greenhouse effect?

A
  • gases in the atmosphere (such as CO2, methane and water vapour) are essential in retaining heat to keep the planet warm enough to sustain life.
  • this is done when gases in the atmosphere absorb terrestrial radiation coming from earths surface and re-radiate it in all directions. this is done in an attempt to slow the rate heat exits the atmosphere.
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9
Q

what happens to incoming solar radiation (6)

A
  • 3% absorbed by clouds
  • 16% absorbed by dust, vapour and CO2
  • 51% absorbed by land and water
  • 6% reflected by atmosphere
  • 20% reflected by clouds
  • 4% reflected by water and land
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10
Q

what happens to outgoing solar radiation?

A
  • 21% re-radiated in long wave radiation
  • 6% reflected from earths surface
  • 21% reflected by clouds
  • 20% reflected by latent heat
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11
Q

what are the 4 main processes in the hydrological cycle?

A
  • Evaporation= the process of water changing from a liquid to a gaseous state
  • condensation= the process of water changing from gaseous to liquid
  • precipitation= occurs when rain, snow, hail falls from the sky
  • transpiration=the process of water being evaporated from the pores of leaves and plants.
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12
Q

describe the process of evaporation;

A

as insolation from the sun heats large bodies of water, evaporation occurs as water molecules are released into the atmosphere

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13
Q

describe the process of condensation:

A

as water vapour rises, it becomes cooler, and its physical state changes to tiny water droplets

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14
Q

describe the process of precipitation;

A

when enough liquid has condensed, the atmosphere can’t support the weight, and gravity causes it to fall back to the earth.

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15
Q

how do the heat budget and hydrological cycle interact? (6)

A
  • evaporation caused via heat energy from the heat budget
  • this same heat energy is used in the process of transpiration
  • warm ocean currents along equator caused via heat budget allow for more evaporation
  • clouds formed via hydrological cycle, affecting heat budget via cloud-albedo effect (blocking of insolation)
  • condensation releases latent heat energy stored from evaporation-this aids the heat budget in moving of heat from earth to space
  • water vapour is a greenhouse gas therefor aiding in absorption and re-radiation of terrestrial radiation (helps maintain earths temp)
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16
Q

natural causes of climate change?

A
  • external influences include; fluctuations in energy emitted by sun (sunspots), changes in orbit/axial tilt affecting distribution of solar energy.
  • internal influences include; variations in composition of greenhouse gases, changes in surface reflectivity, plate tectonics and cooling effects of volcanic dust
17
Q

anthropogenic causes of climate change?

A
  • greenhouse gas emissions via burning of fossil fuels
  • wet rice paddies release lots of methane
  • livestock creates 29% of global methane emissions
  • power generation
  • transportation
18
Q

how do sunspots work?

A
  • sunspots work on an 11 year cycle, breaking very 5.5 years. huge magnetic storms occur on the suns surface that break the magnetic field, causing excess radiation.
  • this excess radiation is released as coronal mass ejections or solar flares
19
Q

explain how volcanic dust can cause climate change?

A
  • when there is a volcanic eruption there is a brief period time of immense heating, however a period of cooling also follows.
  • during an eruption, all the gases (sulphuric dioxide, co2), dust and ash in the atmosphere reflect insolation
  • millions of tonnes of sulphur dioxide has the potential to reach the stratosphere (50km), where it then converts to reflective aerosol (sulphuric acid) over a period of months
20
Q

explain how fossil fuels cause climate change?

A
  • fossil fuels are burned in order to generate power (appliances, transport etc)
  • fossil fuels contain carbon and when burned release co2, sulphur dioxide and nitrous oxide
  • an increase of gases in our atmosphere slow the passage of terrestrial radiation back to space, due to atmosphere absorbing and re-emiting gg, these gases are sent in all directions-including back to earth resulting in a warmer surface for longer periods of time.
21
Q

why is there less precipitation in the poles?

A
  • due to a lack of evaporation (thus moisture in the air- less sun)
  • when there are small amounts of moisture in the air, the cold air doesn’t allow it to rise and create clouds, any precipitation/ moisture freezes as ice.
  • due to being in an area of high pressure, the descending air lacks moisture resulting in less cloud cover.
22
Q

why is there lots of rainfall near the equator?

A

-strong solar heating creates uplift of moist air forming heat lows resulting in thunderstorms

23
Q

describe mid-lattitude temperature regions precipitation patterns

A
  • moderate with most of the precipitation created with cold fronts within sub polar or mid latitude low pressure systems
  • form when moist air rises as cold polar air masses collide and wedge under the warmer air.
24
Q

what is restoration?

A

the process and act of restoring land cover within the ecosystem back to its original state following human actions/involvement.

25
Q

what is rehabilitation?

A

refers to the repairing the services the ecosystem provides, thus repairing its overall level of productivity.