During the next week and a half or so we will be concerned with energy, temperature, heat, energy transport, and energy balance between the earth, atmosphere, and space. 

It is easy to lose sight of the main concepts because there are so many details.  The following (found on pps 43&44 in the photocopied Class Notes) is meant to introduce some of what we will be covering in class.  Click here to download a more printer friendly version of this section.


We will learn the names of several different types or forms of energy. Kinetic energy is energy of motion. Some examples are mentioned and sketched above.  It is a relatively easy to visualize and understand form of energy.

Latent heat energy is perhaps the most underappreciated and most confusing type of energy. The word latent refers to energy that is hidden in water and water vapor.  The hidden energy emerges when water vapor condenses or water freezes.

Radiant energy is a very important form of energy that was for some reason left off the original list.  Sunlight is an example of radiant energy that we can see and feel (you feel warm when you stand in sunlight).  There are many types of radiant energy that are invisible.


Water vapor is a particularly important form of invisible energy.  When water vapor condenses to produce the water droplets (or ice crystals) in a cloud, an enormous amount of latent heat energy is released into the atmosphere. 

It is hard to visualize or appreciate the amount of energy released into the atmosphere during condensation.  You can imagine the work that you would do carrying a gallon of water (8 pounds) from Tucson to the top of Mt. Lemmon.  To accomplish the same thing Mother Nature must first evaporate the water and (if my calculations are correct) that requires about 100 times the energy that you would use to carry the 8 pounds of water to the summit of Mt. Lemmon.  And Mother Nature transports a lot more than just a single gallon.

Four energy transport processes are listed below.
 

By far the most important process is electromagnetic radiation (light is a common form of electromagnetic radiation).  This is the only process that can transport energy through empty space.  Electromagnetic radiation travels both to the earth (from the sun) and away from the earth into space.  Electromagnetic radiation is also responsible for about 80% of the energy transported between the ground and atmosphere.

You might be surprised to learn that latent heat is the second most important transport process.


Rising parcels of warm air and sinking parcels of cold air are examples of free convection.  Because of convection you feel colder or a cold windy day than on a cold calm day. 
Ocean currents are also an example of convection.  Ocean currents transport energy from the warm tropics to colder polar regions.

Note that convection is a 3rd way of causing rising air motions in the atmosphere (convergence into centers of low pressure, and fronts were the other two ways). 

Conduction is the least important energy transport at least in the atmosphere.  Air is such a poor conductor of energy that it is generally considered to be an insulator.



Water vapor is a particularly important form of invisible energy.  When water vapor condenses to produce the water droplets (or ice crystals) in a cloud, an enormous amount of latent heat energy is released into the atmosphere. 

It is hard to visualize or appreciate the amount of energy released into the atmosphere during condensation.  You can imagine the work that you would do carrying a gallon of water (8 pounds) from Tucson to the top of Mt. Lemmon.  To accomplish the same thing Mother Nature must first evaporate the water and (if my calculations are correct) that requires about 100 times the energy that you would use to carry the 8 pounds of water to the summit of Mt. Lemmon.  And Mother Nature transports a lot more than just a single gallon.


The next picture shows energy being transported from the sun to the earth in the form of electromagnetic radiation.

We are aware of this energy because we can see it (sunlight also contains invisible forms of light) and feel it.  With all of this energy arriving at and being absorbed by the earth, what keeps the earth from getting hotter and hotter?  The answer is that the earth also sends energy back into space (the orange and pink arrows in the figure below)


This infrared light is an invisible form of energy (it is weak enough that we don't usually feel it either).  A balance between incoming and outgoing energy is achieved and the earth's annual average temperature remains constant.

We will also look closely at energy transport between the earth's surface and the atmosphere. This is where latent heat energy transport and convection and conduction operate (they can't outside the atmosphere into outer space).


That is also where the atmospheric greenhouse operates.  That will be a important goal - to better understand how the atmospheric greenhouse effect works.


Remember that without the greenhouse effect, the global annual average surface temperature on the earth would be about 0o F rather than 60o F.