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Climate Change: Observed Impacts on Planet Earth

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Climate Change: Observed Impacts on Planet Earth Edited by Trevor M. Letcher

Emeritus Professor University of KwaZulu-Natal Durban, South Africa

Elsevier Radarweg 29, PO Box 211, 1000 AE Amsterdam, The Netherlands Linacre House, Jordan Hill, Oxford OX2 8DP, UK First edition 2009 Copyright © 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publisher Permissions may be sought directly from Elsevier’s Science & Technology Rights Department in Oxford, UK: phone (þ44) (0) 1865 843830; fax (þ44) (0) 1865 853333; email: [emailprotected]. Alternatively you can submit your request online by visiting the Elsevier web site at http://elsevier.com/locate/permissions, and selecting Obtaining permission to use Elsevier material

Notice No responsibility is assumed by the publisher for any injury and/or damage to persons or property as a matter of products liability, negligence or otherwise, or from any use or operation of any methods, products, instructions or ideas contained in the material herein. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Climate change : observed impacts on planet Earth / edited by Trevor M. Letcher. 1st ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978 0 444 53301 2 1. Climatic changes. 2. Climatic changes Environmental aspects. 3. Global environmental change. I. Letcher, T. M. (Trevor M.) QC903.C56 2009 551.6 dc22 2009006502 ISBN: 978 0 444 53301 2 For information on all Elsevier publications visit our website at elsevierdirect.com

Printed and bound in The Netherlands 09 10 11 12 10 9 8 7 6

5 4 3 2

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Contents

Foreword Preface Contributors Introduction

xiii xv xix xxiii

Part I Possible Causes of Climate Change 1. The Role of Atmospheric Gases in Global Warming R. P. Tuckett 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

Introduction Origin of the Greenhouse Effect: ‘Primary’ and ‘Secondary’ Effects The Physical Chemistry Properties of Greenhouse Gases The Lifetime of a Greenhouse Gas in the Earth’s Atmosphere General Comments on Long Lived Greenhouse Gases Conclusion References

3 4 9 15 17 18 19

2. The Role of Widespread Surface Solar Radiation Trends in Climate Change: Dimming and Brightening S. Cohen 1. Introduction 2. Solar Radiation and its Measurement 3. Trends in Surface Solar Radiation or Global Dimming and Brightening 4. The Causes of Dimming and Brightening 5. The Influence of Solar Radiation Changes (Dimming and Brightening) on Climate 6. Conclusions References

22 22 26 32 33 38 38

3. The Role of Space Weather and Cosmic Ray Effects in Climate Change L. I. Dorman 1. Introduction 2. Solar Activity, Cosmic Rays and Climate Change

44 45

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3. The Influence on the Earth’s Climate of the Solar System Moving Around the Galactic Centre and Crossing Galaxy Arms 4. The Influence of Molecular Dust Galactic Clouds on the Earth’s Climate 5. The Influence of Interplanetary Dust Sources on the Earth’s Climate 6. Space Factors and Global Warming 7. The Influence of Asteroids on the Earth’s Climate 8. The Influence of Nearby Supernova on the Earth’s Climate 9. Discussion and Conclusions References

65 65 67 68 70 70 71 74

4. The Role of Volcanic Activity in Climate and Global Change G. Stenchikov 1. 2. 3. 4.

Introduction Aerosol Loading, Spatial Distribution and Radiative Effect Volcanoes and Climate Summary References

77 79 82 98 99

5. The Role of Variations of the Earth’s Orbital Characteristics in Climate Change L. J. Lourens and E. Tuenter 1. 2. 3. 4.

Introduction Astronomical Parameters Orbital Induced Climate Change Conclusion References

103 104 112 120 121

Part II A Geological History of Climate Change 6. A Geological History of Climate Change J. Zalasiewicz and M. Williams 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.

Introduction Climate Models Long Term Climate Trends Early Climate History Phanerozoic Glaciations The Mesozoic Early Cenozoic Greenhouse Development of the Quaternary Icehouse Astronomical Modulation of Climate Milankovitch Cyclicity in Quaternary (Pleistocene) Climate History

127 128 129 131 132 133 134 135 136

Contents

10. 11. 12. 13.

vii Quaternary Sub Milankovitch Cyclicity The Holocene Climate of the Anthropocene Conclusions References

137 138 138 139 139

Part III Indicators of Climate and Global Change 7. Changes in the Atmospheric Circulation as Indicator of Climate Change T. Reichler 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.

Introduction The General Circulation of the Atmosphere The Poleward Expansion of the Tropical Circulation The Decreasing Intensity of the Tropical Circulation Emerging Mechanisms Connection to Extratropical Circulation Change Outstanding Problems and Conclusions References

145 147 149 155 155 159 160 162

8. Weather Pattern Changes in the Tropics and Mid-Latitudes as an Indicator of Global Changes R. M. Trigo and L. Gimeno 1. 2. 3. 4.

Introduction Observed Changes in Extra Tropical Patterns Changes in Tropical Patterns Conclusion References

165 166 170 178 179

9. Bird Ecology as an Indicator of Climate and Global Change W. Fiedler 1. Introduction 2. Indicators of Change 3. Conclusion References

181 182 193 193

10. Mammal Ecology as an Indicator of Climate Change M. M. Humphries 1. Introduction: A Primer on Mammal Thermoregulation and Climate Impacts

197

Climate Change: Observed Impacts on Planet Earth

Contents

viii 2. Demonstrated Impacts of Climate Change on Mammals 3. Linking Time and Space in Mammal Climate Responses References

199 210 211

11. Climate Change and Temporal and Spatial Mismatches in Insect Communities S. L. Pelini, K. M. Prior, D. J. Parker, J. D. K. Dzurisin, R. L. Lindroth and J. J. Hellmann 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

Introduction Direct Effects of Climate Change on Insects Host Plant Mediated Effects on Insects Predator Mediated Effects on Insect Populations Climate Change and Insect Pests Conclusion References

215 217 219 222 225 226 227

12. Sea Life (Pelagic and Planktonic Ecosystems) as an Indicator of Climate and Global Change M. Edwards 1. Pelagic and Planktonic Ecosystems 2. Observed Impacts on Pelagic and Planktonic Ecosystems 3. Conclusion and Summary of Key Indicators References

233 237 246 248

13. Changes in Coral Reef Ecosystems as an Indicator of Climate and Global Change M. J. Attrill 1. 2. 3. 4.

Introduction Tropical Coral Reef Ecosystems The Associated Fauna of Coral Reefs Conclusion References

253 254 258 260 260

14. Changes in Marine Biodiversity as an Indicator of Climate Change B. Worm and H. K. Lotze 1. 2. 3. 4.

Introduction Climate Change and the Oceans Effects of Climate Change on Biodiversity Cumulative Impacts and Indirect Effects of Climate Change 5. Biodiversity as Insurance against Climate Change Impacts

263 264 265 272 274

Contents

6. Conclusions References

ix 275 276

15. Intertidal Indicators of Climate and Global Change N. Mieszkowska 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Introduction Climate Change and Biogeography Mechanisms Additional Impacts of Global Change Conclusions References

281 283 289 291 292 292

16. Plant Ecology as an Indicator of Climate and Global Change M. D. Morecroft and S. A. Keith 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

Introduction Changes in Phenology Changes in Distribution Community Composition Plant Growth Conclusions References

297 299 300 301 302 303 304

17. The Impact of Climate and Global Change on Crop Production G. R. Dixon 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

Introduction Impact on Plant Growth and Reproduction Scale of the Problems Climate Change Models Winners and Losers Adaptation References

307 308 313 314 315 320 322

18. Rising Sea Levels as an Indicator of Global Change R. Gehrels 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Introduction Is Sea Level Rising? Why is Sea Level Rising? Are Contemporary Rates of Sea level Rise Unusual? Conclusion References

325 325 328 333 334 334

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19. Sea Temperature Change as an Indicator of Global Change M. J. Attrill 1. Introduction: Role of Ocean, Mechanisms and Correction of Bias 2. Long Term Trends in Sea Temperature: The Historical Context 3. Global and Regional Patterns of Sea Temperature over the Last 100 150 Years 4. Conclusion: Anthropogenic Influence References

337 341 343 345 346

20. Ocean Current Changes as an Indicator of Global Change T. Kanzow and M. Visbeck 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Introduction The Variable Ocean Oceanographers’ Tools The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation The AMOC’s Role in Heat Transport, Oceanic Uptake of Carbon and Ventilation of the Deep Ocean 6. Can we Detect Changes in the AMOC? Is the AMOC Changing Already? 7. Conclusion References

349 350 351 353 357 361 362 364

21. Ocean Acidification as an Indicator for Climate Change C. Turley and H. S. Findlay 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.

Introduction Evidence from Observations Model Predictions of Future Change Impacts Biogeochemical Cycling and Feedback to Climate Adaptation, Recovery and Mitigation Conclusion References

367 370 374 374 381 383 385 387

22. Ice Sheets: Indicators and Instruments of Climate Change D. G. Vaughan 1. 2. 3. 4.

Introduction Sea level and Ice How Ice Sheets Work Summary References

391 391 394 398 399

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23. Lichens as an Indicator of Climate and Global Change A. Aptroot 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

Introduction Predicted Effects Observed Effects Uncertain Effects Habitats with Vulnerable Lichens Conclusion References

401 402 402 403 405 407 408

24. Coastline Degradation as an Indicator of Global Change R. J. Nicholls, C. Woodroffe and V. Burkett 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.

Introduction Sea Level Rise and Coastal Systems Climate Change and Global/Relative Sea Level Rise Increasing Human Utilisation of the Coastal Zone Climate Change, Sea Level Rise and Resulting Impacts Recent Impacts of Sea Level Rise and Climate Change Global Warming and Coasts at Latitudinal Extremes The Challenge to Understand Contemporary Impacts Concluding Remarks References

409 411 412 413 415 416 418 420 421 422

25. Plant Pathogens as Indicators of Climate Change K. A. Garrett, M. Nita, E. D. De Wolf, L. Gomez and A. H. Sparks 1. Introduction 2. Climate Variables and Plant Disease 3. Evidence that Simulated Climate Change Affects Plant Disease in Experiments 4. Evidence that Plant Disease Patterns have Changed due to Climate Change References

425 426

Index

439

430 431 436

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Foreword

The 2007 Assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change drew two substantially new conclusions which have had a marked effect on policymakers. The first was that current climate change is ‘unequivocal’ and is due largely to emissions of greenhouse gases resulting from human activity. The second was that the effects of this observed global warming can now be detected on every continent in the form of altered hydrology and biology. The positive response by policymakers was due not only to the higher levels of certainty surrounding the issue, but that empirically observed evidence now supported the simulation modelling of the future that had generally characterised the previous three IPCC assessments. Now, the policymakers could say, we are beginning to see come true just what the scientists had been predicting. The concreteness of that case is examined in great detail in this book. Its chapters on the various processes that may affect the world’s climate and on the detected changes in atmospheric, ocean and terrestrial (especially biological) systems serve to unfold this scientific narrative for the reader. But the book’s strength lies in this not just being a summary of the IPCC because many of its authors were not involved extensively in the 2007 assessment, and thus they are able both to evaluate afresh the nature of the evidence and to bring new perspectives to bear on the issue. As the editor says in his Introduction, if there ever was doubt about climate change then this should be dispelled in this book. I would add that if there ever was a case to be made for action, then this case has been made here in this volume and others like it which has followed the IPCC 2007 assessment. It is clear that stringent and immediate action is needed to curb greenhouse emissions and that we also need to start, now, on building our capacity to adapt to climate change impacts. It will take both massive mitigation and adaptation to meet the challenge of climate change. Martin Parry Visiting Professor, Centre for Environmental Policy, Imperial College London Co-Chair Working Group II Assessment on Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2007

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Preface

Despite the many signs of global warming, global dimming, and changes to the climate, there are still many people who will not accept that something very ominous is taking place. This book is a very positive contribution to the problem. Professor Letcher is to be congratulated for inspiring so many world class experts into compiling such a wide reaching volume aimed at assessing and accounting for our changing climate. The book on climate change answers the basic questions: what can possibly cause global warming and climate change; and what evidence do we have that such changes are taking place? The first five chapters focus on the possible causes of climate change with the first salvo being fired by Richard Tuckett who has put forward an eloquent chapter on the possible effects of anthropogenic greenhouse gases on the climate. Although we cannot prove conclusively that there is a cause-and-effect correlation between rising global temperature and atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration, the correlation over the past 100 years is very convincing. To put the whole idea of climate change in perspective, there is a chapter on a Geological History of Climate Change. In this chapter Jan Zalasiewicz and Mark Williams traces the climate of the Earth over the past billion years. One really needs to understand the past in order to assess the present and indeed to attempt to predict the future consequences of climate change. The remaining 19 chapters focus on a variety of global changes brought about by climate change. These include detailed scientific observations on weather patterns, plants and plant pathogens, lichens, bird, insect and animal ecology, sea temperature and ocean currents, rising sea levels and coastal erosion, and ice sheets. The chapter by Geoff Dixon on the impact of climate change on crop production is highly relevant, particularly in the developing world. The evidence from the book that global warming and all the resultant changes, is due to human activity makes one appreciate just how fragile our environment is as we spin round the sun and move through space with our galaxy and all the other galaxies. Life was created on earth in an environment with more or less fixed physical properties which include: the level of radiation from the sun; the degree of shielding of the sun’s radiation by the atmospheric gases; the level of the Earth’s internal heat; and above all, the properties of the atmosphere such as pressure, temperature and gaseous composition. The Earth and its atmosphere form a very fragile system, which is in equilibrium with the life forms it supports. These conditions have developed

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over billions of years and any disturbance of this equilibrium could spell disaster to life on earth. The rapid rise of the world’s human population, together with the need for more energy, protein rich food, and greater wealth, has led us to a situation in which this equilibrium is now being seriously threatened. This is not the first time that life on Earth has been responsible for altering the composition of the atmosphere. About 2.45 billion years ago enormous numbers of cyanobacteria began changing the composition of the atmosphere by producing oxygen and hence ozone, and together with later plant life, photosynthetically produced most of the oxygen we now have in our atmosphere. This change led to the demise of many life forms which were unable to live or adapt to an atmosphere rich in oxygen. Climate Change can be considered as a sequel to Professor Letcher’s recent book Future Energy (published in 2008, also by Elsevier). Our quest for more energy is strongly linked to the problems of climate change and the bottom line is that we must reduce our dependency on fossil fuels and move to more sustainable and cleaner forms of energy which do not produce carbon dioxide. Both books pose huge questions which this and future generations must focus on. As the main causes of global warming and climate change are largely chemical in nature it is right that the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry should take a lead in highlighting the problem with the hope of directing and influencing governments and world leaders to take a stand in reducing the burning of fossil fuels and the manufacture of other greenhouse gases. IUPAC has supported Professor Letcher’s work and the production of the book is indeed a Project done through its Chemistry and the Environment Division (V1). Climate Change confirms IUPAC’s commitment, as a leading scientific union, to pure and applied science. This book supports the work done by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and presents experimental evidence for both the cause of the problem and the problem itself, with little attempt at computer modelling and predicting possible future scenarios. The evidence in this book should alert an anxious population of what is happening and the next step is to close ranks and change our ways. Climate Change with its 25 chapters is an excellent source book and will be an important guide for all who wish to know the truth of global warming, global dimming and climate change. The conclusions to be derived from this book make it abundantly clear that we are challenged to significantly reduce the greenhouse gas emissions from human activity. This is not an easy task especially with our rapidly increasing population and the need for more energy to fuel our growing economies and associated wealth generating projects. Our future and that of our grandchildren will be severely compromised unless we take heed and act now. I believe this book is a shining light in the drive to educate the public in what is really taking place in the world of climate change and will be a beacon for many years to come.

Preface

xvii

I warmly thank Professor Letcher and his team for making such a phenomenal contribution to one of our greatest challenges. Climate change is a crisis which affects all living species. We have only one globe; let us all care for it. Professor Piet Steyn Past President of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry Department of Chemistry and Polymer Science Stellenbosch University Stellenbosch

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Contributors

Numbers in parentheses indicate the pages on which the authors’ contributions begin.

Richard P. Tuckett (3), School of Chemistry, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom Shabtai Cohen (21), Department of Environmental Physics and Irrigation. Institute of Soil, Water and Environmental Sciences, Agricultural Research Organization, The Volcani Centre, P.O. Box 6, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel Lev I. Dorman (43), Head of Cosmic Ray and Space Weather Center with Emilio Se`gre Observatory, Tel Aviv University, TECHNION and Israel Space Agency, P.O. Box 2217, Qazrin 12900, Israel and Chief Scientist of Cosmic Ray Department of IZMIRAN Russian Academy of Science, Troitsk 142090, Moscow region, Russia Georgiy Stenchikov (77), Department of Environmental Sciences, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901 855, USA Lucas J. Lourens (103), Department of Earth Sciences, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, Budapestlaan 4, 3584 CD Utrecht, The Netherlands Erik Tuenter (103), Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research Utrecht (IMAU), P.O. Box 80,000, 3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands Jan Zalasiewicz (127), Department of Geology, University of Leicester, University Road, Leicester LE1 7RH, United Kingdom Mark Williams (127), Department of Geology, University of Leicester, University Road, Leicester LE1 7RH, United Kingdom Thomas Reichler (145), Department of Meteorology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112 0110, USA Ricardo M. Trigo (165), Centro de Geofisica da Universidade de Lisboa, IDL, Faculty of Sciences, University of Lisbon, Campo Grande, Ed C8, Piso 3, 1749 016 Lisbon, Portugal Luis Gimeno (165), Departamento de Fı´sica Aplicada, Faculty of Sciences, University of Vigo, 32004 Ourense, Spain Wolfgang Fiedler (181), Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Vogelwarte Radolfzell, Schlossallee 2, D 78315, Radolfzell, Germany Murray M. Humphries (197), Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, Ste Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, Canada H9X 3V9 Shannon L. Pelini (215), Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA Kirsten M. Prior (215), Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA xix

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Contributors

Derrick J. Parker (215), Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA Jason D.K. Dzurisin (215), Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA Jessica J. Hellmann (215), Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA Richard L. Lindroth (215), Department of Entomology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, USA Martin Edwards (233), Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for Ocean Science, Citadel Hill, The Hoe, Plymouth PL1 2PB, United Kingdom and Marine Institute, University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth PL4 8AA, United Kingdom Martin J. Attrill (253), Marine Biology and Ecology Research Centre, Marine Institute, University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth PL4 8AA, United Kingdom Boris Worm (263), Biology Department, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 4J1 Heike K. Lotze (263), Biology Department, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada B3H 4J1 Nova Mieszkowska (281), Marine Biological Association of the UK, The Laboratory, Citadel Hill, Plymouth PL1 2PB, United Kingdom Michael D. Morecroft (297), NERC Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, Crowmarsh Gifford, Wallingford OX10 8 BB, United Kingdom Sally A. Keith (297), Centre for Conservation Ecology and Environmental Change, Bournemouth University, Fern Barrow, Poole BH12 5BB, United Kingdom Geoffrey R. Dixon (307), Centre for Horticulture and Landscape, School of Biological Sciences, Whiteknights, The University of Reading, Reading, Berkshire RG6 6AS, United Kingdom Roland Gehrels (325), School of Geography, University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth PL4 8AA, United Kingdom Martin J. Attrill (337), Marine Biology and Ecology Research Centre, Marine Institute, University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth PL4 8AA, United Kingdom T. Kanzow (349), National Oceanographic Centre, Empress Dock, Southampton SO14 3ZH, United Kingdom; Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences, Kiel, Germany M. Visbeck (349), Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences, Kiel, Germany Carol Turley (367), Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place, The Hoe, Plymouth PL1 3DH, United Kingdom Helen S. Findlay (367), Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place, The Hoe, Plymouth PL1 3DH, United Kingdom David G. Vaughan (391), British Antarctic Survey, Natural Environment Research Council, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ET, United Kingdom

Contributors

xxi

Andre Aptroot (401), ABL Herbarium, Gerrit van der Veenstraat 107, NL 3762 XK Soest, The Netherlands Robert J. Nicholls (409), School of Civil Engineering and the Environment and the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, United Kingdom Colin Woodroffe (409), School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia Virginia Burkett (409), U.S. Geological Survey, 540 North Courthouse Street, Many, LA 71449 USA Karen A. Garrett (425), Department of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506, USA M. Nita (425), Department of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506, USA E.D. De Wolf (425), Department of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506, USA L. Gomez (425), Department of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506, USA A.H. Sparks (425), Department of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506, USA

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Introduction

The phrases CLIMATE CHANGE and GLOBAL WARMING and more recently GLOBAL COOLING are now part of our lives and rarely does a day go by without a mention in the press or on the radio of the possible causes of climate change and its consequences. Climate change has come upon us in a relatively short space of time and is accelerating with alarming speed. It is perhaps the most serious problem that the civilized world has had to face. It is the subject of major international co-operation through the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) which was set up in 1988 by the World Meteorological Organization and the United Nations Environment Programme. The IPCC has reported its findings in 1990, 1996, 2001 and 2007. The intention of this book is not to compete with the IPCC reports but to offer support through a different approach. This book does not focus on predicting the outcomes of climate change but presents both the facts relating to the possible causes of climate change and the evidence that climate and global changes are taking place. In spite of all the publicity and coverage and indeed in the face of real evidence, there are many dissenting voices who either do not accept that climate change is taking place or that anthropogenic gases and compounds, such as carbon dioxide, are responsible for the major effect. One of the aims of this book is to counteract these comments and to present the evidence for climate change, in an unemotional, non-political, readable and scientific manner. The book is divided into 25 chapters, each one written by an expert in the field. Five chapters have been devoted to answering the questions surrounding possible causes of climate change and the role being played by anthropogenic gases, compounds and particles. The five include solar effects, space weather, volcanic activity, variations in the earth’s orbit, the role of cosmic radiation and the effect of changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides, water vapour and man made gases such as freons. To put climate change into perspective, there is a chapter on the geological history of the earth’s climate. There is evidence of slow changes in climate, taking place over millions of years, and also of abrupt reorientations of the Earth’s climate, the latter perhaps foreshadowing the way climate is responding to the present human activity. If there ever was doubt about whether global and climate changes are taking place or not, then the last section of nineteen chapters should put pay to such thinking. These chapters give expert interpretations of the changes taking place in diverse areas such as weather patterns; bird, mammal and insect ecology; sea life and marine biodiversity; the inter-tidal zone; impacts on food xxiii

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supply; sea level rising; sea temperature rising; ocean current and ocean acidification; glacial and polar cap melting; plants, lichen, and plant pathogens and coastline degradation. Little or no attempt has been made to present climate models or to predict climate changes in the future. This book focuses more on the experimental observational and presents the reader with the likelihood, through statistically significant evidence, of a climate changing future. An aim of the book is to have all the scientific details of possible causes and scientific evidence for climate change written by experts in a language accessible by all, brought together in one volume. In this way comparisons can be made and issues put into perspective. The book will benefit both the non-specialist and the serious student. Each chapter begins with an Introduction and finishes with a Conclusion, written in lay-person’s language and each chapter contains references to all the relevant and latest scientific publications. In this way the book will be of great benefit to students and researchers in each of the topics as well as making an excellent source and textbook for University and College courses in ‘Climate Change’. The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry supports the book, through its ‘Chemistry and the Environmental’ Division, and the IUPAC logo appears on the front cover. The IUPAC’s adherence to the International System of Quantities is reflected in the book with the use of SI units where ever possible. One will, for example, notice that the symbols for ‘hour’, ‘day’ and ‘year’ are ‘h’, ‘d’ and ‘a’ respectively. In spite of its title, the book does include indicators of global change such as ‘ocean acidification’ which, like climate change, is a result of excess carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The book is a scientific presentation of the facts surrounding climate change and no attempt has been made to offer solutions to climate change although the basic nature of the problem is obvious: the burning of oil, coal and gas is causing a significant rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide, water vapour, nitrogen oxides and also particulate matter. In this respect, climate change and our future energy are closely intertwined and this book will, I am sure, have a strong influence on deciding our future energy options. “CLIMATE CHANGE: observed impacts on Planet Earth” is written not only for students and researchers and their professors, but for decision makers in government and in industry, journalists and editors, corporate leaders and all interested people who wish for a balanced, scientific and honest look at this major problem facing us in the 21st century. I wish to thank all the authors for contributing chapters and for their many suggestions and discussions all of which have helped to improve the book and its format. Special thanks must go to Professor Martin Attrill and to Dr Carol Turley for their suggestions, confidence and advice and to my wife, Dr. Valerie Letcher, for her help and support. Trevor M Letcher Stratton on the Fosse 1 November 2008

Part I

Possible Causes of Climate Change

Chapter 1

The Role of Atmospheric Gases in Global Warming Richard P. Tuckett School of Chemistry, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, United Kingdom

1. Introduction 2. Origin of the Greenhouse Effect: ‘Primary’ and ‘Secondary’ Effects 3. The Physical Chemistry Properties of Greenhouse Gases 4. The Lifetime of a Greenhouse Gas in the Earth’s Atmosphere

5. General Comments on Long Lived Greenhouse Gases 6. Conclusion Acknowledgements References

1. INTRODUCTION If the general public in the developed world is confused about what the greenhouse effect is, what the important greenhouse gases are, and whether greenhouse gases really are the predominant cause of the recent rise in temperature of the earth’s atmosphere, it is hardly surprising. Nowadays, statements by one scientist are often immediately refuted by another, and both tend to state their claims with almost religious fervour. Furthermore, politicians and the media have not helped. It is only 14 a (years) ago that the newly appointed Secretary of State for the Environment in the United Kingdom made the cardinal sin of confusing the greenhouse effect with ozone depletion by saying they had the same scientific causes. (In retrospect, John Gummer was closer to the truth than he realised, in that one class of chemicals, the chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), are both the principal cause of ozone depletion and are major greenhouse gases, but these two facts are scientifically unrelated.) Furthermore, to many, even in the respectable parts of the media, ‘greenhouse gases’ are two dirty words. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth, in that there has always been a greenhouse effect operative in the earth’s atmosphere. Climate Change: Observed Impacts on Planet Earth Copyright © 2009 by Elsevier B.V. All rights of reproduction in any form reserved.

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PART

I

Possible Causes of Climate Change

Without it we would inhabit a very cold planet, and not exist in the hospitable temperature of 290 300 K. The purpose of this opening chapter of this book is to explain in simple terms what the greenhouse effect is, what its origins are and what the properties of greenhouse gases are. I will restrict this chapter to an explanation of the physical chemistry of greenhouse gases and the greenhouse effect, and not delve too much into the politics of ‘what should or should not be done’. However, one simple message to convey at the onset is that the greenhouse effect is not just about concentration levels of carbon dioxide (CO2), and it is too simplistic to believe that all our problems will be solved, if we can reduce CO2 concentrations by x% in y years. Shine [1] has also commented many times that there is much more to the greenhouse effect than carbon dioxide levels.

2. ORIGIN OF THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT: ‘PRIMARY’ AND ‘SECONDARY’ EFFECTS

Emitted energy

The earth is a planet in dynamic equilibrium, in that it continually absorbs and emits electromagnetic radiation. It receives ultra-violet and visible radiation from the sun, it emits infra-red radiation and energy balance says that ‘energy in’ must equal ‘energy out’ for the temperature of the planet to be constant. This equality can be used to determine what the average temperature of the planet should be. Both the sun and the earth are black-body emitters of electromagnetic radiation. That is, they are masses capable of emitting and absorbing all frequencies (or wavelengths) of electromagnetic radiation uniformly. The distribution curve of emitted energy per unit time per unit area versus wavelength for a black body was worked out by Planck in the first part of the twentieth century, and is shown pictorially in Fig. 1. Without mathematical detail, two points are relevant. First, the total energy emitted per unit time integrated over all wavelengths is proportional to (T/K)4. Second, the wavelength of the maximum in the emission distribution curve varies inversely with (T/K), that is, lmax a (T/K) 1. These are Stefan’s and Wien’s

Sun 5780K

0.1

0.5

1

peak at ~0.5µm

peak at ~10µm Earth 290K

5 10 Wavelength / µm

50

100

FIGURE 1 Black body emission curves from the sun (T 5780 K) and the earth (T 290 K), showing the operation of Wien’s Law that lmax a (1/T). The two graphs are not to scale.

Chapter

1

The Role of Atmospheric Gases in Global Warming

5

Laws, respectively. Comparing the black-body curves of the sun and the earth, the sun emits UV/visible radiation with a peak at ca. 500 nm characteristic of Tsun ¼ 5780 K. The temperature of the earth is a factor of 20 lower, so the earth’s black-body emission curve peaks at a wavelength which is 20 times longer or ca. 10 mm. Thus the earth emits infra-red radiation with a range of wavelengths spanning ca. 4 50 mm, with the majority of the emission being in the range 5 25 mm (or 400 2000 cm 1). The solar flux energy intercepted per second by the earth’s surface from the sun’s emission can be written as Fs(1A)pRe2, where Fs is the solar flux constant outside the Earth’s atmosphere (1368 Js 1m 2), Re is the radius of the Earth (6.38 106 m), and A is the earth’s albedo, corresponding to the reduction of incoming solar flux by absorption and scattering of radiation by aerosol particles (average value 0.28). The infra-red energy emitted per second from the earth’s surface is 4pRe2sTe4, where s is Stefan’s constant (5.67 10 8 Js 1m 2K 4) and 4pRe2 is the surface area of the earth. At equilibrium, the temperature of the earth, Te, can be written as: Fs ð1 AÞ 1=4 ð1Þ Te ¼ 4s Using the data above yields a value for Te of ca. 256 K. Mercifully, the average temperature of the earth is not a Siberian 17 C, otherwise life would be a very unpleasant experience for the majority of humans on this planet. The reason why our planet has a hospitable higher average value of ca. 290 K is the greenhouse effect. For thousands of years, absorption of some of the emitted infra-red radiation by molecules in the earth’s atmosphere (mostly CO2, O3 and H2O) has trapped this radiation from escaping out of the earth’s atmosphere (just as a garden greenhouse operates), some is re-radiated back towards the earth’s surface, thereby causing an elevation in the temperature of the surface of the earth. Thus, it is the greenhouse effect that has maintained our planet at this average temperature, and for this fact we should all be very grateful! This phenomenon is often called the ‘primary’ greenhouse effect. It is, therefore, a myth to portray all aspects of the greenhouse effect as bad news; it is the reverse that is true. Evidence for the presence of greenhouse gases absorbing infra-red radiation in the atmosphere comes from satellite data. Figure 2 shows data collected by the Nimbus 4 satellite circum-navigating the earth at an altitude outside the earth’s troposphere (0 < altitude, h < 10 km) and stratosphere (10 < h < 50 km). The infra-red emission spectrum in the range 6 25 mm escaping from earth represents a black-body emitter with a temperature of ca. 290 K, with absorptions (i.e., dips) between 12 and 17 mm, around 9.6 mm, and l < 8 mm. These wavelengths correspond to infra-red absorption bands of CO2, O3 and H2O, respectively, three atmospheric gases that have contributed to the primary greenhouse effect. Of course, the argument that the primary greenhouse gases have maintained our planet at a constant temperature of ca. 290 K pre-supposes that their

6

PART

I

Possible Causes of Climate Change

May 5. 1979 11:01 GMT 2.8⬚N 166.6⬚W

280

K

100

240

K

50

(erg-s−1

Radiance cm−2 ster−1

/ cm−1)

150

200K 0 25.0

16.7

12.5

10.0 8.3 Wavelength/µm

7.1

6.2

FIGURE 2 Infra red emission spectrum escaping to space as observed by the Nimbus 4 satellite outside the earth’s atmosphere. Absorptions due to CO2 between 12 and 7 mm, O3 (around 9.6 mm) and H2O (l < 8 mm) are shown. (With permission from Dickinson and Clark (eds.), Carbon dioxide Review, OUP, 1982.)

concentrations have remained approximately constant over very long periods of time. This has not happened with CO2 and, to a lesser extent, with O3 over the 260 a (years) since the start of the Industrial Revolution, ca. 1750, and it is changes in the concentrations of these and newer greenhouse gases that have caused a ‘secondary’ greenhouse effect to occur over this time window, leading to the temperature rises that we are all experiencing today. That, at least, is the main argument of the proponents of the ‘greenhouse gases, mostly CO2, equals global warming’ school of thought. There is no doubt that the concentration of CO2 in our atmosphere has risen from ca. 280 parts per million by volume (ppmv) to current levels of ca. 380 ppmv over the last 260 a. (1 ppmv is equivalent to a number density of 2.46 1013 moleculescm 3 for a pressure of 1 bar and a temperature of 298 K.) It is also not in doubt that the average temperature of our planet has risen by ca. 0.5 0.8 K over this same time window (Fig. 3). What has not been proven is that there is a cause-and-effect correlation between these two facts, the main problem being that there is not sufficient structure or resolution with time in either the CO2 concentration or the temperature data. Even more recent data of the last 100 a (Fig. 4), where the correlation seems to be better established will not convince the sceptic. That said, as demonstrated most clearly by the recent IPCC2007 report [2], the consensus of world scientists, and certainly physical scientists, is that a strong correlation does exist. By contrast, an excellent example in atmospheric science of sufficient resolution being present to confirm a correlation between two sets of data occurred in 1989; the concentrations of O3 and the ClO free radical in the stratosphere were shown to have a strong anti-correlation effect when data were collected by an aircraft as a function of latitude in the Antarctic (Fig. 5) [3].

Chapter

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The Role of Atmospheric Gases in Global Warming

7

1998 Temperature 440 0.5

Error limits [95% confidence level]

400

Temperature 0.0

360

−0.5

320 CO2

−1.0

Carbon Dioxide Concentration [parts per million]

Temperature Variation [compared with 1961–1990 average, in degrees Celsius]

1.0

280

1000

1200

1400 1600 Year

1800

2000

FIGURE 3 The average temperature of the earth and the concentration level of CO2 in the earth’s atmosphere during the last 1000 a. (With permission from www.env.gov.bc.ca/ air/climate/indicat/images/appendnhtemp.gif and www.env.gov.bc.ca/air/climate/indicat/images/ appendCO2.gif)

Global Average Temperature and Carbon Dioxide Concentrations, 1880 - 2004 390 370

57.9

360

57.7

350

57.5

340

57.3

330 320

57.1

310

56.9

300

56.7

Global Average Temperature/⬚F

CO2 Concentration/ppmv

58.1

Global Temperatures CO2 (ice cores) CO2 (Mauna Loa)

380

290 56.5 2010

2000

1990

1980

1970

1960

1950

1940

1930

1920

1910

1900

1890

1880

280

Year AD Data Source Temperature: ftp://ftp.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/anomalies/annual_land.and.ocean.ts Data Source CO2 (Siple Ice Cores): http://cdiac.esd.oml.gov/ftp/trends/co2/siple2.013 Data Source CO2 (Mauna Loa): http://cdiac.esd.oml.gov/ftp/trends/co2/maunaloa.co2

Graphic Design: Michael Ernst. The Woods Hole Research Center

FIGURE 4 The average temperature of the earth and the concentration level of CO2 in the earth’s atmosphere during the ‘recent’ history of the last 100 a. (With permission from the web sites shown in the figure.)

8

PART

I

Possible Causes of Climate Change

1200

1000

3000 O3

2000 O3 Mixing Ratio

CIO Mixing Ratio

800

600

400 1000

200 CIO 0 62

63

·

64

65

66 67 68 69 Latitude/degrees South

70

71

0 72

CIO Mixing Ratio in ppt O3 Mixing Ratio in ppb

FIGURE 5 Clear anti correlation between the concentrations of ozone, O3, and the chlorine monoxide radical, ClO, in the stratosphere above the Antarctic during their Spring season of 1987. (With permission from Anderson et al., J. Geophys. Res. D. 94 (1989) 11465.)

There was not only the general observation that a decrease of O3 concentration correlated with an increase in ClO concentration, but also the resolution was sufficient to show that at certain latitudes dips in O3 concentration corresponded exactly with rises in ClO concentration. Even the most doubting scientist could accept that the decrease in O3 concentration in the Antarctic Spring was related somehow to the increase in ClO concentration, and this result led to an understanding over the next 10 15 a of the heterogeneous chemistry of chlorinecontaining compounds on polar stratospheric clouds. Unfortunately, such good resolution is not present in the data (e.g., Figs. 3 and 4) for the ‘CO2 versus T’ global warming argument, leading to the multitude of theories that are now in the public domain. I accept that it would be very surprising if there was not some relationship between such rapid increases in CO2 concentration and the temperature of the planet, nevertheless there are two aspects of Fig. 3 that remain unanswered by

Chapter

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The Role of Atmospheric Gases in Global Warming

9

proponents of such a simple theory. First, the data suggest that the temperature of the earth actually decreased between 1750 and ca. 1920 whilst the CO2 concentration increased from 280 to ca. 310 ppm over this time window. Second, the drop in temperature around 1480 AD in the ‘little ice age’ is not mirrored by a similar drop in CO2 concentration. All that said, however, the apparent ‘agreement’ between rises of both CO2 levels and Te over the last 50 a is very striking. The most likely explanation surely is that there are a multitude of effects, one of which is the concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, contributing to the temperature of the planet. At certain times of history, these effects are ‘in phase’ (as now), at other times they may have been in ‘anti-phase’ and working against each other.

3. THE PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY PROPERTIES OF GREENHOUSE GASES The fundamental physical property of a greenhouse gas is that it must absorb infra-red radiation via one or more of its vibrational modes in the infra-red range of 5 25 mm. Furthermore, since the primary greenhouse gases of CO2, O3 and H2O absorb in the range 12 17 mm (or 590 830 cm 1), 9.6 mm (1040 cm 1) and l < 8 mm (>1250 cm 1), an effective secondary greenhouse gas is one which absorbs infra-red radiation strongly outside these ranges of wavelengths (or wavenumbers). A molecular vibrational mode is only infra-red active if the motion of the atoms generates a dipole moment. That is, dm/dQ 6¼ 0, where m is an instantaneous dipole moment and Q a displacement coordinate representing the vibration of interest. It is worth stating the obvious straightaway, that N2 and O2 which constitute 99% of the earth’s atmosphere do not absorb infra-red radiation, their sole vibrational mode is infra-red inactive, so they play no part in the greenhouse effect and global warming. It is only trace gases in the atmosphere (Table 1) such as CO2 (0.038%), CH4 (0.0002%), O3 (3 10 6%) and CFCs such as CF2Cl2 (5 10 8%) which contribute to the greenhouse effect. Put another way, the earth’s atmosphere is particularly fragile if only 1% of the molecules present can have such a major effect on humans living on the planet. Furthermore, the most important molecular trace gas, CO2, absorbs via its n2 bending vibrational mode at 667 cm 1 or 15.0 mm, which coincidentally is very close to the peak of the earth’s black-body curve; the spectroscopic properties of CO2 have not been particularly kind to the environment! Thus, infra-red spectroscopy of gas-phase molecules, in particular at what wavelengths and how strongly a molecule absorbs such radiation, will clearly be important properties to determine how effective a trace pollutant will be to the greenhouse effect. The second property of interest is the lifetime of the pollutant in the earth’s atmosphere: the longer the lifetime, the greater contribution a greenhouse gas will make to global warming. The main removal processes in the troposphere and stratosphere are reactions with OH free radicals and electronically excited

10

PART

I

Possible Causes of Climate Change

TABLE 1 Main constituents of ground-level clean air in the earth’s atmosphere Molecule

Mole fraction

ppmva (2008)

ppmv (1748)

N2

0.78 or 78%

780 900

780 900

O2

0.21 or 21%

209 400

209 400

H2O

0.03 (100% humidity, 298 K)

31 000

31 000

H2O

0.01 (50% humidity, 298 K)

16 000

16 000

Ar

0.01 or 1%

9300

9300

or 0.038%

379

280

or 0.002%

18

18

6

CO2 Ne

3.8 10

4

1.8 10

5

1.77 10

CH4 N2O O3b All CFCs

c

All HCFCs

d

All PFCs

e

All HFCs

f

or 0.0002%

1.77

0.72

3.2 10

7

or 0.00003%

0.32

0.27

3.4 10

8

or 0.000003%

8.7 10

10

1.9 10

10

8.3 10

11

6.1 10

11

0.034

0.025

8

0.0009

8

0.0002

9

0.00008

9

0.00006

or 8.7 10 % or 1.9 10 % or 8.3 10 % or 6.1 10 %

parts per million by volume. 1 ppmv is equivalent to a number density of 2.46 1013 moleculescm 3 for a pressure of 1 bar and a temperature of 298 K. b the concentration level of O3 is very difficult to determine because it is poorly mixed in the troposphere. It shows large variation with both region and altitude. c chlorofluorocarbons (e.g., CF2Cl2). d hydrochlorofluorocarbons (e.g., CHClF2). e perfluorocarbons (e.g., CF4, C2F6, SF5CF3, SF6). f hydrofluorocarbons (e.g., CH3CF3). a

oxygen atoms, O* (1D), and photodissociation in the range 200 300 nm (in the stratosphere) or 300 500 nm (in the troposphere). Thus, the reaction kinetics of pollutant gases with OH and O* (1D) and their photochemical properties in the UV/visible will yield important parameters to determine their effectiveness as greenhouse gases. All these data are incorportated into a dimensionless number, the global warming potential (GWP) or greenhouse potential (GHP) of a greenhouse gas. All values are calibrated with respect to CO2 whose GWP value is 1. A molecule with a large GWP is one with strong infra-red absorption in the windows where the primary greenhouse gases such as CO2, etc., do not absorb, long lifetimes, and concentrations rising rapidly due to human presence on the planet. GWP values of some of the most important secondary greenhouse gases are given in the bottom row of Table 2. Note that CO2 has the lowest GWP value of the seven greenhouse gases shown.

O3

Concentration (2008)/ppmv

CH4

CF2Cl2 [all CFCs]

N2O

1.2 10

7

0.0005 [0.0009]

5.6 10

6

1.2 10

7

0.32 [0.18 0.32]

0.52

0.034

1.77

0.32

0.0005 [0.0009]

DConcentration (1748 2008)/ppmv

99

0.009a

1.05

0.05

Radiative efficiency, ao / W m 2 ppbv 1

1.68 10

Total radiative forcing b/ W m

2

3.33 10

2

4.59 10

4

3.41 10

3

SF5CF3

5.6 10

379

5

SF6 6

a

0.60 3

1.66

ca. 0.30c

0.48

0.16

0.17 [0.27]

2.9 10

Contribution from long lived greenhouse gases excluding ozone to overall greenhouse effect /%d

63 (57)

(10)

18 (16)

6 (5)

6 [10] (6 [9])

0.1 (0.1)

0.003 (0.003)

Lifetime, te/a

ca. 50 200f

ca. days weeksg

12

120

100 [45 1700]

3200

800

Global warming potential (100 a projection)

1

25

298

10 900 [6130 14 400]

22 800

17 700

a

h

7.2 10

5

reference [20]. due to change in concentration of long-lived greenhouse gas from the pre-Industrial era to the present time. an estimated positive radiative forcing of 0.35 Wm 2 in the troposphere is partially cancelled by a negative forcing of 0.05 Wm 2 in the stratosphere [2]. d assumes the latest value for the total radiative forcing of 2.63 0.26 Wm 2 [2]. The values in brackets show the percentage contributions when the estimated radiative forcing for ozone is included in the value for the total radiative forcing. e assumes a single-exponential decay for removal of greenhouse gas from the atmosphere. f CO2 does not show a single-exponential decay [4]. g O3 is poorly mixed in the troposphere, so a single value for the lifetime is difficult to estimate. It is removed by the reaction, OH þ O3!HO2 þ O2. Its concentration shows large variations both with region and altitude. h GWP values are generally not applied to short-lived pollutants in the atmosphere, due to serious inhomogeneous changes in their concentration. b

The Role of Atmospheric Gases in Global Warming

CO2

1

Greenhouse gas

Chapter

TABLE 2 Examples of greenhouse gases and their contribution to global warming [2,20]

c

11

12

PART

I

Possible Causes of Climate Change

Information in the previous two paragraphs is described in qualitative and descriptive terms. However, all the data can be quantified, and a mathematical description is now presented. The term that characterises the infra-red absorption properties of a greenhouse gas is the radiative efficiency, ao. It measures the strength of the absorption bands of the greenhouse gas, x, integrated over the infra-red black-body region of ca. 400 2000 cm 1. It is a (per molecule) microscopic property and is usually expressed in units of Wm 2ppbv 1. If this value is multiplied by the change in concentration of pollutant over a defined time window, usually the 260 a from the start of the Industrial Revolution to the current day, the macroscopic radiative forcing in units of Wm 2 is obtained. (Clearly, a pollutant whose concentration has not changed over this long time window will have a macroscopic radiative forcing of zero.) One may then compare the radiative forcing of different pollutant molecules over this time window, showing the current contribution of different greenhouse gases to the total greenhouse effect. Thus, the IPCC 2007 report [2] quotes the radiative forcing for CO2 and CH4 in 2005 as 1.66 and 0.48 Wm 2, respectively, out of a total for long-lived greenhouse gases of 2.63 Wm 2. These two molecules, therefore, contribute 81% in total (63% and 18%, individually) to the global warming effect. Effectively, the radiative forcing value gives a currentday estimate of how serious a greenhouse gas is to the environment, using concentration data from the past. The overall effect in the future of one molecule of pollutant on the earth’s climate is described by its GWP (or GHP) value. It measures the radiative forcing, Ax, of a pulse emission of the greenhouse gas over a defined time period, t, usually 100 a, relative to the time-integrated radiative forcing of a pulse emission of an equal mass of CO2: ðt Ax ðtÞdt ð2Þ GWPx ðtÞ ¼ ð t 0 ACO2 ðtÞdt 0

The GWP value therefore informs how important one molecule of pollutant x is to global warming via the greenhouse effect compared to one molecule of CO2, which is defined to have a GWP value of unity. It is an attempt to project into the future how serious the presence of a long-lived greenhouse gas will be in the atmosphere. (Thus, when the media state that CH4 is 25 times as serious as CO2 for global warming, what they are saying is that the GWP value of CH4, looking 100 a into the future, is 25; one molecule of CH4 is expected to cause 25 times as much ‘damage’ as one molecule of CO2.) For most greenhouse gases, the radiative forcing following an emission at t ¼ 0, takes a simple exponential form: t ð3Þ Ax ðtÞ ¼ Ao; x exp tx

Chapter

1

The Role of Atmospheric Gases in Global Warming

13

where tx is the lifetime for removal of species x from the atmosphere. For CO2, a single-exponential decay is not appropriate since the lifetime ranges from 50 to 200 a, and we can write: " # X t ð4Þ bi exp ACO2 ðtÞ ¼ Ao;CO2 bo þ ti i where the response function, the bracket in the right-hand side of Eq. (4), is derived from more complete carbon cycles. Values for bi (i ¼ 0 4) and ti (i = 1 4) have been given by Shine et al. [4]. It is important to note that the radiative forcing, Ao, in Eqs. (2) (4) has units of Wm 2kg 1. For this reason, it is given a different symbol to the microscopic radiative efficiency, ao, with units of Wm 2ppbv 1. Conversion between the two units is simple [4]. The time integral of the large bracket on the right-hand side of Eq. (4), defined KCO2 , has dimensions of time, and takes values of 13.4 and 45.7 a for a time period of 20 and 100 a, respectively, the values of t for which GWP values are most often quoted. Within the approximation that the greenhouse gas, x, follows a single-exponential time decay in the atmosphere, it is then possible to parameterise Eq. (2) to give an exact analytical expression for the GWP of x over a time period t: GWPx ðtÞ MWCO2 ao; x tx t ¼ 1 exp MWx ao;CO2 KCO2 GWPCO2 ðtÞ tx

ð5Þ

In this simple form, the GWP only incorporates values for the radiative efficiency of greenhouse gases x and CO2, ao, x and ao,CO2; the molecular weights of x and CO2; the lifetime of x in the atmosphere, tx; the time period into the future over which the effect of the pollutant is determined; and the constant KCO2 which can easily be determined for any value of t. Thus the GWP value scales with both the lifetime and the microscopic radiative forcing of the greenhouse gas, but it remains a microscopic property of one molecule of the pollutant. The recent rate of increase in concentration of a pollutant (e.g., the rise in concentration per annum over the last decade), one of the factors of most concern to policymakers, does not contribute directly to the GWP value. This and other factors [4] have caused criticism of the use of GWPs in policy formulation. Data for seven greenhouse gases are shown in Table 2. CO2 and O3 constitute naturally occurring greenhouse gases whose concentration levels ideally would have remained constant at pre-industrial revolution levels. Although H2O vapour is the most abundant greenhouse gas in the atmosphere, it is neither long-lived nor well mixed: concentrations range 0 3% (i.e., 0 30 000 ppmv) over the planet, and the average lifetime is only a few days. Its average global concentration has not changed significantly in the

14

PART

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Possible Causes of Climate Change

last 260 a, and it therefore has zero radiative forcing. CH4 and N2O constitute naturally occurring greenhouse gases with larger ao values than that of CO2. The CH4 concentration, although small, has increased by ca. 150% since pre-industrial times. After CO2, it is the second most important greenhouse gas, and its current total radiative forcing is ca. 29% that of CO2. N2O concentration has increased only by ca. 16% over this same time period. It has the fourth highest total radiative forcing of all the naturally occurring greenhouse gases, following CO2, CH4 and O3. Dichlorofluoromethane, CF2Cl2, is one of the most common of CFCs. These are man-made chemicals that have grown in concentration from zero in pre-industrial times to a current total concentration of 0.9 ppbv (1 ppbv is equivalent to 1 part per 109 (billion) by volume, or a number density of 2.46 1010 moleculescm 3 at 1 bar pressure and a temperature of 298 K). Their concentration is now decreasing due to the 1987 Montreal and later International Protocols, introduced to halt stratospheric ozone destruction and (ironically) nothing to do with global warming! SF6 and SF5CF3 are two long-lived halocarbons with currently very low concentration levels, but with high annual percentage increases and exceptionally long lifetimes in the atmosphere. They have very high ao and GWP values, essentially because of their large number of strong infra-red-active vibrational modes and their long lifetimes. It is noted that CO2 and CH4 have the lowest GWP values of all greenhouse gases. Why, then, is there such concern about levels of CO2 in the atmosphere, and with the possible exception of CH4 no other greenhouse gas is hardly ever mentioned in the media? The answer is that the overall contribution of a pollutant to the greenhouse effect, present and future, involves a convolution of its concentration with the GWP value. Thus CO2 and CH4 currently contribute most to the greenhouse effect (third bottom row of Table 2) simply due to their high change in atmospheric concentration since the Industrial Revolution; note, however, that the ao and GWP values of both gases are relatively low. Indeed, the n2 bending mode of CO2 at 15.0 mm, which is the vibrational mode most responsible for greenhouse activity in CO2, is close to saturation. By contrast, SF5CF3 is a perfluorocarbon molecule with the highest microscopic radiative forcing of any known greenhouse gas (earning it the title ‘super’ greenhouse gas [5,6]), even higher than that of SF6. SF6 is an anthropogenic chemical used extensively as a dielectric insulator in high-voltage industrial applications, and the variations of concentration levels of SF6 and SF5CF3 with time in the last 50 a have tracked each other very closely [7]. The GWP of these two molecules is very high, SF6 being slightly higher because of its atmospheric lifetime, ca. 3200 a [8], is about four times greater than that of SF5CF3. However, the contribution of these two molecules to the overall greenhouse effect is still very small because their atmospheric concentrations, despite rising rapidly at the rate of ca. 6 7% per annum, are still very low, at the level of parts per 1012 (trillion) by volume; 1 pptv is equivalent to a number density of 2.46 107 moleculescm 3 at 1 bar and 298 K).

Chapter

1

The Role of Atmospheric Gases in Global Warming

15

In conclusion, the macroscopic properties of greenhouse gases, such as their method of production, their concentration and their annual rate of increase or decrease, are mainly controlled by environmental and sociological factors, such as industrial and agricultural methods, and ultimately population levels on the planet. The microscopic properties of these compounds, however, are controlled by factors that undergraduates world-wide learn about in science degree courses: infra-red spectroscopy, reaction kinetics and photochemistry. Data from such lab-based studies determine values for two of the most important parameters for determining the effectiveness of a greenhouse gas: the microscopic radiative efficiency, ao, and the atmospheric lifetime, t.

4. THE LIFETIME OF A GREENHOUSE GAS IN THE EARTH’S ATMOSPHERE The microscopic radiative efficiency of a greenhouse gas is determined by measuring absolute absorption coefficients for infra-red-active vibrations in the range ca. 400 2000 cm 1 and integrating over this region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Its meaning is unambiguous. The lifetime, however, is a term that can mean different things to different scientists, according to their discipline. It is, therefore, pertinent to describe exactly what is meant by the lifetime of a greenhouse gas (penultimate row of Table 2), and how these values are determined. To a physical chemist, the lifetime generally means the inverse of the pseudo-first-order rate constant of the dominant chemical or photolytic process that removes the pollutant from the atmosphere. Using CH4 as an example, it is removed in the troposphere via oxidation by the OH free radical, OH þ CH4 ! H2O þ CH3. The rate coefficient for this reaction at 298 K is 6.4 10 15 cm3molecules 1s 1 [9], so the lifetime is approximately equal to (k298[OH]) 1. Assuming the tropospheric OH concentration to be 0.05 pptv or 1.2 106 moleculescm 3 [2], the lifetime of CH4 is calculated to be ca. 4 a. This is within a factor of three of the accepted value of 12 a (Table 2). The difference arises because CH4 is not emitted uniformly from the earth’s surface, a finite time is needed to transport CH4 via convection and diffusion into the troposphere, and oxidation occurs at different altitudes in the troposphere where the OH concentration varies from its average value of 1.2 106 moleculescm 3. We can regard this as an example of a two-step kinetic process, A!B!C

ð6Þ

with first-order rate constants k1 and k2. The first step, A ! B, represents the transport of the pollutant into the atmosphere, whilst the second step, B ! C, represents the chemical or photolytic process (e.g., reaction with an OH radical in the troposphere) that removes the pollutant from the atmosphere. In

16

PART

I

Possible Causes of Climate Change

general, the overall rate of the process (whose inverse is called the lifetime) will be a function of both k1 and k2, but its value will be dominated by the slower of the two steps. Thus, in calculating the lifetime of CH4 simply by determining (k298[OH]) 1, we are assuming that the first step, transport into the region of the atmosphere where chemical reactions occurs, is infinitely fast compared to the removal process. The exceptionally long-lived greenhouse gases in Tables 1 and 2 (e.g., SF6, CF4, SF5CF3) behave in the opposite sense. Now, the slow, ratedetermining process is the first step, that is, transport of the greenhouse gas from the surface of the earth into the region of the atmosphere where chemical removal occurs. The chemical or photolytic processes that ultimately remove SF6, etc., will have very little influence on the lifetime, that is, k1 k2 in Eq. (6). These molecules do not react with OH or O* (1D) to any significant extent, and are not photolysed by visible or UV radiation in the troposphere or stratosphere. They therefore rise higher into the mesosphere (h > 60 km) where the dominant processes that can remove pollutants are electron attachment and vacuum-UV photodissociation at the Lyman-a wavelength of 121.6 nm [6]. We can define a chemical lifetime, tchemical, for such species as: tchemical ¼ ½ke ½e þ s121:6 J121:6 F121:6

1

ð7Þ

ke is the electron attachment rate coefficient, s121.6 is the absorption crosssection at this wavelength, [e ] is the average number density of electrons in the mesosphere, J121.6 is the mesospheric solar flux and F121.6 the quantum yield for dissociation at 121.6 nm. Often, the photolysis term is much smaller than the electron-attachment term, and the second term of the squared bracket in Eq. (7) is ignored. It is important to appreciate that the value of tchemical is a function of position, particularly altitude, in the atmosphere. In the troposphere, tchemical will be infinite because both the concentration of electrons and J121.6 are effectively zero, but in the mesosphere tchemical will be much less. However, multiplication of ke for SF6, etc., by a typical electron density in the mesosphere, ca. 104 cm 3 [10], yields a chemical lifetime which is far too small and bears no relation to the true atmospheric lifetime, simply because most of the SF6, etc., does not reside in the mesosphere. One may, therefore, ask where the quoted lifetimes for SF6, CF4 and SF5CF3 of 3200, 50 000 and 800 a, respectively, come from [8,11]. The lifetimes of such long-lived greenhouse gas can only be obtained from globally averaged loss frequencies. The psuedo-first-order destruction rate coefficient for each region of the atmosphere is weighted according to the number of molecules of compound in that region, X k i V i ni ð8Þ hkiglobal ¼ Xi Vn i i i

Chapter

1

The Role of Atmospheric Gases in Global Warming

17

where i is a region, ki is the pseudo-first-order removal rate coefficient for region i, Vi is the volume of region i, and ni is the number density of the greenhouse gas under study in region i. The lifetime is then the inverse of hkiglobal. The averaging process thus needs input from a 2- or 3-dimensional model of the atmosphere in order to supply values for ni. This is essentially a meteorological, and not a chemical problem. It may explain why meteorologists and physical chemists sometimes have different interpretations of what the lifetime of a greenhouse gas actually means. Many such studies have been made for SF6 [8,12,13], and differences in the kinetic model (ki) and the atmospheric distributions (ni) from different climate or transport models account for the variety of atmospheric lifetimes that have been reported. The importance of both these factors has also been explored by Hall and Waugh [14]. Their results show that because the fraction of the total number of SF6 molecules in the mesosphere is very small, the global atmospheric lifetime given by Eq. (8) is very much longer than the mesospheric, chemical lifetime given by Eq. (7). Thus, they quote that if the mesospheric loss frequency is 9 10 8 s 1, corresponding to a local lifetime of 129 d (days), then the global lifetime ranges between 1425 and 1975 a, according to which climate or transport model is used.

5. GENERAL COMMENTS ON LONG-LIVED GREENHOUSE GASES In 1994, Ravishankara and Lovejoy wrote that the release of any long-lived species into the atmosphere should be viewed with great concern [15]. They noted that the CFCs, with relatively ‘short’ lifetimes of ca. 100 a, have had a disastrous effect over a relatively short period of time, ca. 30 50 a, on the ozone layer in the stratosphere that protects humans from harmful UV radiation. However, following implementation of international treaties (e.g., Montreal, 1987 [16]) it is now expected that the ozone layer will recover within 50 100 a [17]. At present, there are no known undesired chemical effects of low concentrations of perfluorocarbons such as CF4 and SF6 in the atmosphere. However, their rapidly increasing concentrations (ca. 7% per annum for SF6) and their exceptionally long lifetimes (thousands, not hundreds of years) means that life on earth may not be able to adapt to any changes these gases may cause in the future. They suggested that all such long-lived molecules should be considered guilty, unless proven otherwise. If SF6 is perceived potentially to be the major problem of this family of molecules, inert, dielectric gases with lower GWP values could be used as substitutes for SF6 in industrial applications; ring-based perfluorocarbons, such as cyclic-C4F8 and cyclic-C5F8 are possibilities [18]. However, the simplest, possibly naı¨ve, suggestion is that humans should not put up into the atmosphere any more pollutants than are absolutely necessary. The worldwide debate just starting, probably 50 a too late, is what constitutes ‘absolutely necessary’.

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6. CONCLUSION In this chapter, I have only sought to explain the physical properties of greenhouse gases, and what are the factors that determine their effectiveness as pollutant gases that can cause global warming. I have not attempted to describe the natural or anthropogenic sources of these greenhouse gases, and why their concentrations have increased since the pre-Industrial era; this will be covered by other chapters in this book. CO2 and CH4 currently contribute ca. 81% of the total radiative forcing of long-lived greenhouse gases (Table 2), but it is too simplistic to say that control of CO2 levels will be the complete solution, as is often implied by politicians and the media. It is certainly true that concentration levels of CO2 in the earth’s atmosphere are a very serious cause for concern, and many countries are now putting in place targets and policies to reduce them. It is my personal belief that CO2 levels in the atmosphere correlate strongly with lifestyle of many of the population, and with serious effort, especially in the developed world, huge reductions are possible. The challenge will be to effect policies to reduce significantly the concentration of CO2 without seriously decreasing the standard of living of the population and negating all the benefits that technology has brought us in the last 50 100 a. I give two examples for possible policy change. First, I query whether the huge expansion in air travel within any one country at the expense of slower methods of transports (e.g., trains) is really worth all the social and economic benefits that are claimed. The price to be paid, of course, is hugely enhanced CO2 emissions. Second, I query whether the benefits of 24 h shopping 7 days a week are really worth the extra CO2 emissions that result from keeping shops open continuously. Would our standard of living drop significantly if shops opened for much fewer hours? Most of Switzerland closes at 4.00 p.m. on a Saturday for the rest of the weekend, yet this country is very close to the top of all international league tables for wealth creation, standard of living and levels of well-being/happiness. CH4 levels, however, in my opinion pose just as serious a threat to our planet as CO2 simply because they will be much harder to reduce. Whilst it is surprising and remains unclear why the total radiative forcing of methane, 0.48 Wm 2, has remained unchanged over the last decade [2], a major component of methane emissions correlates strongly with the number of animal livestock which itself is dependent on the population of the planet. Controlling, let alone reducing world-wide population levels over the short period of time that is apparently available to ‘save the planet’ (ca. 20 40 a) [19] is a major task. Surely, this could and should be the major policy directive of the United Nations over the next few decades.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I thank members of my research group who participated in laboratory-based experiments on the long-lived ‘super’ greenhouse gas, SF5CF3, that are

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alluded to in this chapter. I also thank Professor Keith Shine (University of Reading, United Kingdom) for many useful discussions on radiative efficiency and global warming potentials.

REFERENCES 1. K.P. Shine, W.T. Sturges, Science, 315 (2007) 1804 1805. 2. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 4th Assessment Report (2007), Working Group I, Chapters 1 and 2, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2007. 3. J.G. Anderson, W.H. Brune, M.H. Proffitt, J. Geophys. Res. D, 94 (1989) 11465 11479. 4. K.P. Shine, J.S. Fuglestvedt, K. Hailemariam, N. Stuber, Clim. Change, 68 (2005) 281 302. 5. R.P. Tuckett, Educ. Chem., 45 (2008) 17 21. 6. R.P. Tuckett, Adv. Fluorine Sci., 1 (2006) 89 129 (Elsevier). 7. W.T. Sturges, T.J. Wallington, M.D. Hurley, K.P. Shine, K. Sihra, A. Engel, D.E. Oram, S.A. Penkett, R. Mulvaney, C.A.M. Brenninkmeijer, Science, 289 (2000) 611 613. 8. A.R. Ravishankara, S. Solomon, A.A. Turnipseed, R.F. Warren, Science, 259 (1993) 194 199. 9. T. Gierczak, R.K. Talukdar, S.C. Herndon, G.L. Vaghjiani, A.R. Ravishankara, J. Phys. Chem. A, 101 (1997) 3125 3134. 10. N.G. Adams, D. Smith, Contemp. Phys., 29 (1988) 559 578. 11. R.Y.L. Chim, R.A. Kennedy, R.P. Tuckett, Chem. Phys. Lett., 367 (2003) 697 703. 12. R.A. Morris, T.M. Miller, A.A. Viggiano, J.F. Paulson, S. Solomon, G. Reid, J. Geophys. Res. D, 100 (1995) 1287 1294. 13. T. Reddmann, R. Ruhnke, W. Kouker, J. Geophys. Res. D, 106 (2001) 14525 14537. 14. T.M. Hall, D.W. Waugh, J. Geophys. Res. D, 103 (1998) 13327 13336. 15. A.R. Ravishankara, E.R. Lovejoy, J. Chem. Soc. Farad. Trans., 90 (1994) 2159 2169. 16. United Nations Environment Program, Ozone Secretariat, 7th edition (2006), http://ozone. unep.org/publications/MP Handbook/index.shtml 17. E.C. Weatherhead, S.B. Andersen, Nature, 441 (2006) 39 45. 18. M.A. Parkes, S. Ali, R.P. Tuckett, V.A. Mikhailov, C.A. Mayhew, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 9 (2007) 5222 5231. 19. D.A. King, G. Walker, The Hot Topic: How to Tackle Global Warming and Still Keep the Lights on. Harvest Books, Washington, USA, 2008. 20. T.J. Blasing, Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Centre, Oak Ridge National Laboratory (2008), http://cdiac.ornl.gov/pns/current ghg.html.

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Chapter 2

The Role of Widespread Surface Solar Radiation Trends in Climate Change: Dimming and Brightening Shabtai Cohen Department of Environmental Physics and Irrigation, Institute of Soil, Water and Environmental Sciences, Agricultural Research Organization, The Volcani Centre, P.O. Box 6, Bet Dagan 50250, Israel

1. Introduction 2. Solar Radiation and its Measurement 2.1. Top (TOA) and Bottom (BOA) of the Atmosphere Solar Radiation and Atmospheric Transmission 2.2. Earth’s Albedo and Net TOA Solar Radiation 2.3. BOA Radiation 2.4. Measurement of Surface Radiation 2.5. Comparing Eg# from Different Sites 2.6. Archives of Surface Solar Radiation Measurements 3. Trends in Surface Solar Radiation or Global Dimming and Brightening 3.1. Global Dimming Reports in the Twentieth Century

3.2. From Dimming to Brightening 3.3. Eg# Prior to the 1950s 3.4. Regional Changes 3.5. Cloud Trends and their Influence on Eg# 4. The Causes of Dimming and Brightening 5. The Influence of Solar Radiation Changes (Dimming and Brightening) on Climate 5.1. The Evaporation Conundrum 5.2. Soil Moisture Trends 5.3. The Hydrological Cycle 5.4. Daily Temperature Range (DTR) 5.5. Wind Speed and the Monsoon System 6. Conclusions References

Climate Change: Observed Impacts on Planet Earth Copyright © 2009 by Elsevier B.V. All rights of reproduction in any form reserved.

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1. INTRODUCTION The flux density and wavelength of electro-magnetic radiation emitted from a body depend on its temperature. On the earth’s surface the wavebands that contain the most energy, and are therefore of prime interest in the context of climate influences, are those emitted by the sun and the earth. The calculation of spectral distributions from Planck’s law using their approximate temperatures of 5800 and 300 K, for sun and earth, shows that 97% of the energy of solar and >99% of that of terrestrial radiation fall within the wavebands of 0.29 3 and 3 100 mm, respectively. Those wavebands are referred to as short wave (or solar) and long wave (or terrestrial) radiation [1]. The problem with the current ubiquitous, steady increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration stems not from its direct influence on climate, but rather from its absorption of radiation in the long wave band, which decreases long wave radiative losses from the earth. Since its absorption in the solar spectrum is small, CO2 has a negligible influence on the earth’s solar radiation balance. Global radiation (Eg#) is the total solar radiation falling on a horizontal surface at the earth’s surface, that is, at the bottom of the atmosphere (BOA). Precise wide-spread measurements of Eg# began in the early twentieth century and although it was first assumed that no multi-annual trends in this quantity occurred, by the 1970s there was evidence of significant decreases at some sites. As the evidence for large multi-decadal trends in Eg# grew, the relationship between decreasing solar radiation (or global dimming) and wide spread decreasing pan evaporation was noticed. The energetic similarity of these changes led to scientific recognition that changes in Eg# were playing a significant role in climate change. Previous assumptions that other parts of the earth’s radiation balance were unchanging, have subsequently come under scrutiny. This paper provides some background material on solar radiation and reviews some of the work done on the changing Eg# and its influences on earth’s climate.

2. SOLAR RADIATION AND ITS MEASUREMENT 2.1. Top (TOA) and Bottom (BOA) of the Atmosphere Solar Radiation and Atmospheric Transmission Several of the quantities encountered when studying the earth’s short wave radiation balance are easily computed. Understanding these relationships can give the quantitatively minded reader more confidence about solar radiation and its trends. Black-body radiation is described by the Stefan Boltzman equation, that is, B ¼ sT 4 where B is radiant flux density emitted from a black body of temperature T, and s is the Stefan Bolzmann constant, 5.67 10–8 Wm 2K 4. Taking the

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sun’s average surface temperature to be 5800 K, calculating solar output for a sphere of solar radius, 6.96 108 m, and irradiating a large sphere whose radius is the earth sun distance, or one astronomical unit (1.5 1011 m), the radiant flux density reaching a surface normal to the sun’s rays on the earth before it is influenced by the atmosphere, that is, the extra-terrestrial ‘solar constant’, is 1380 Wm 2, which is very close to the currently accepted value of 1366 Wm 2 [2]. The latter varies during the year by about 3.3% due to eccentricity of the earth’s orbit. As long as the solar surface temperature and composition doesn’t change, the yearly average will be constant. In fact, the solar constant has varied by much less than 1% over the past few centuries [3,4]. The ratio of the area of a sphere to that of a circle of the same radius is 4, so the mean solar radiant energy reaching the TOA is 342 Wm 2. TOA (or extra-terrestrial) solar radiation on a plane parallel to the surface varies with the solar zenith angle, that is, the angle between the vertical and the solar vector. Calculation of solar angles and TOA solar radiation is straightforward and given elsewhere [1,5 7]. TOA values are used to compare with BOA measurements in order to determine atmospheric absorption of radiation, for example, atmospheric transmission and turbidity and aerosol optical depth.

2.2. Earth’s Albedo and Net TOA Solar Radiation The earth’s planetary albedo depends mostly on cloudiness, but also on land use. There is no scientific theory to indicate that the planetary albedo has been and will remain constant, and a change of 1% in its value can have a large impact on the earth’s climate system [8]. Accurate measurements of the albedo began in the 1980s. Satellite observations made continuously during the past twenty years indicate that it is relatively constant at 29 2% [9,10]. These measurements are close to previous estimates of 30 [11] and 31% [12]. However, analyses of earthshine measurements suggest that it may have changed by as much as 5% during the past 15 a [13 15]. The earthshine measurements have met with some criticism [9], but they are based on sound theory. In the future, if additional sites are added to the earthshine observation network, these measurements may gain more acceptance and the differences between the earthshine and satellite measurements will have to be resolved. Taking the current earth albedo to be 29%, the net solar input into the planet is about 243 Wm 2 [16].

2.3. BOA Radiation From this brief discussion of TOA solar radiation balance we jump to the situation at the surface below the atmosphere where the solar radiation balance is confounded by atmospheric transmissivity and surface albedo. The former depends mostly on cloudiness and cloud properties, but also on dust and other aerosols. The latter, which has a small influence on downward radiation, depends on surface properties, which are influenced by land use and climate.

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As solar radiation traverses the atmosphere it is absorbed and reflected by gases and non-gaseous particles [17]. Ozone is responsible for absorption of most of the UV radiation, that is, the solar radiation at wavelengths below 0.29 mm; at larger wavelengths oxygen and ozone absorption is negligible. Water vapour is a significant absorber in the infra-red portion of the solar spectrum above 0.7 mm. Carbon dioxide absorption of solar radiation is negligible. Aerosols can scatter and reflect some of the radiation back to space. Clouds can reflect most of the radiation back to space. Radiation reflected from the earth’s surface can be re-reflected back, and so surface albedo can influence the downward flux. Thus, BOA solar radiation is much less than that at TOA, and is commonly divided into two fluxes: direct radiation coming from a 2.5 5 angle centred in the direction of the sun, and diffuse radiation arriving from the rest of the sky hemisphere above the observer. The total of these two, that is, global radiation (Eg#), is the total solar energy available at the surface.

2.4. Measurement of Surface Radiation Total short wave ‘solar’ radiant flux density on a horizontal surface on the earth’s surface (BOA), that is, global radiation, Eg#, is measured with a pyranometer. First class pyranometers measure the temperature difference between an exposed optically black surface and either a white surface (in the older instruments) or the lower non-exposed surface using a thermopile. In order to exclude thermal radiation and advection of heat from the surroundings the black surface is covered with two quartz glass domes which transmit radiation between 200 and 4500 nm wavelength, and a temperature correction circuit is incorporated into the instrument. Another type of ‘pyranometer’ in common use, due to its lower cost, is based on a selenium cell which upon illumination causes an electrical current to flow. The sensor is covered with appropriate filters to measure solar radiation, but the maximum wavelength measured is 1100 nm, so total solar radiation is determined indirectly by assuming that the ratio of the full spectrum to that below 1100 nm is constant. In most outdoor conditions the assumption is good enough for many applications, for example, calculation of crop water requirements, but the non-thermopile pyranometers are not acceptable for first class meteorological measurement. Frequent cleaning of the dome and yearly calibration of sensors is necessary in order to ensure the reliability of measurements. These and other constraints have led to sparse measurement networks producing reliable data for solar radiation as compared to those measuring air temperature. Most of the networks began to operate during the International Geophysical Year, 1957 1958. A second widely used surface measure which has been of interest is sunshine duration (SSD), or the amount of time that direct solar radiation exceeds a threshold of 120 Wm 2, corresponding approximately to direct irradiance at 3 solar elevation under clear sky conditions [1]. This measure has been shown to be highly correlated with global radiation, both on a single day basis

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as well as for yearly totals [18,19]. Instruments measuring SSD came into use in the nineteenth century, and some of their history has been recently reviewed [20]. Many measurement series dating back to the nineteenth century are available in various forms, and analysis of these has enabled a rough view of variations in solar radiation for more than a century (e.g. [21,22]). In addition to surface measurements, satellite based sensors have been monitoring earth radiance in different wavebands for more than two decades. Algorithms have been developed to use these measurements to calculate solar radiation at the surface. These measurements have the advantage of spatial averaging over an area several orders of magnitude larger than the few square centimetres measured by the surface based sensors, and the ongoing efforts to improve the reliability and accuracy of the satellite measurements has led to their increased acceptance.

2.5. Comparing Eg# from Different Sites When comparing sites it is convenient to consider annual totals of Eg#, since seasonal variations can be large and vary greatly areally. However, Eg# varies with altitude and latitude. One way to normalize data from different sites is to determine the transmission of a unit atmosphere, which is similar to turbidity [6,23]. Yearly means of Eg# are converted to atmospheric transmittance, tm, by dividing by integrated yearly extraterrestrial solar irradiance on a horizontal surface (So) computed for the latitude of the measurements, that is, ð Eg # dt tm ¼ ð ð1Þ So # dt Transmittance is also an exponential function of the optical thickness of the atmosphere k, and the vertical non-dimensional air mass, m, such that tm ¼ expðkmÞ or k ¼ lnðtm Þ=m

ð2Þ

For a unit air mass (m = 1) Eqn (2) yields t1 ¼ expðkÞ ¼ expðlnðtm Þ=mÞ

ð3Þ

Values of t1, which expresses the yearly average transmittance of a unit atmosphere at the site, are computed for each yearly mean of Eg#, where m is computed from site altitude using a simple altimetric relationship like: m ¼ exp

A 8200

ð4Þ

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and A is site altitude (m) (after [6]). A second method to normalize data from different sites is multiple regression of Eg# on time and site parameters, where the influence of altitude is taken as linear, but site latitude (F) is taken as cos3(F) [23].

2.6. Archives of Surface Solar Radiation Measurements Solar radiation data measured by the different national weather services and conforming to WMO standards are collected in various national archives and are available from national weather services. Much of this data has also been collected in two archives the Global Energy Balance Archive (GEBA) in Zurich, Switzerland [24], and the World Radiation Data Center (WRDC) archive in St. Petersberg, Russia, which was established by the WMO in 1964. GEBA has incorporated much of the data from the WRDC archive after strict quality control filtering, while the WRDC archive should be used with caution. Data from the US is managed by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory’s (NREL) Renewable Resource Data Center (RReDC, at website: www. nrel.gov/rredc). Although solar radiation has been measured in the US for about 75 a, first class long term data is available for only few of the stations in their network. The World Radiation Monitoring Center (WRMC, http://www.bsrn.awi. de/) archives data from the Baseline Surface Radiation Network (BSRN, [25]), which is a small number of stations (currently about 40) in contrasting climatic zones, covering a latitude range from 80 N to 90 S, where solar and atmospheric radiation is measured with instruments of the highest available accuracy and with high time resolution (1 3 min). The BSRN program began in the late 1990s and is based on voluntary participation of organizations measuring radiation in different countries.

3. TRENDS IN SURFACE SOLAR RADIATION OR GLOBAL DIMMING AND BRIGHTENING Significant multi-year trends in Eg# during the first decades that measurements were made were reported by a few scientists during the twentieth century. Many of these decreasing trends, called ‘global dimming’ [23], were in excess of 1% per decade. They were viewed with considerable scepticism by the scientific community. The reasons for this scepticism are important because they reflect on the way current science is carried out. Here are some possibilities: a. Previous texts, which were accepted as foundations of climate science, assumed that earth’s solar radiation budget was constant on the short term time scale (i.e. hundreds of years [26]), although changes in solar activity and the solar constant were included as possible drivers for long term (i.e. 103 107 a) climate changes (see Ref. [27] for a review of climate change theories up to the mid 1960s).

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b. Climate change science has been dominated by the influence of the ubiquitous and steadily increasing atmospheric greenhouse gases, and especially CO2. A large effort has been made to establish that this change is large enough to warrant worldwide political action. The magnitude of ‘global dimming’ was clearly of the same order of magnitude as the greenhouse gas influence. If large changes were occurring un-noticed to the scientific community, how good was our understanding of climate and climate change? That question may have been viewed as a threat to the attempts to harness political action and the unprecedented funding that climate change science was receiving [28]. c. Climate change science has focused on TOA influences (e.g. TOA radiative forcing) and assumed that the distribution of energy within the system is less important. d. Solar radiation is highly variable spatially and temporally and this high variability has hampered integration of worldwide trends. This is in sharp contrast with greenhouse gases which mix well in the atmosphere and whose rate of increase can be discerned within a few years.

3.1. Global Dimming Reports in the Twentieth Century Suraqui et al. [29] reported ‘severe changes over the years in solar radiation’ and issued a call for ‘a careful study of incoming radiation at different places throughout the world . . . to determine the exact kind, order of magnitude and their causes . . .’. The ‘severe changes’ referred to emerged from the measurements at the site of the Smithsonian Institution’s former solar radiation monitoring station on Mt. St. Katherine in the southern Sinai peninsula (28 310 N, 33 560 E, 2643 m altitude). Measurements using modern radiometers as well as some of the original instruments employed between 1933 and 1937 showed a 12% loss in global radiation during the intervening four decade interval. Atsumu Ohmura, whose background was in glaciology, and who headed the GEBA archive [24], reported at a conference that solar radiation was decreasing at many sites where it was being measured. His colleagues, who were highly sceptical of his findings, discouraged him from pursuing this, and the report was published (or temporarily buried) in a little known conference proceedings [30]. Russak [31] reported decreasing trends of 0.2 0.6 Wm 2a 2 for a few stations in northern Europe. Gerald Stanhill, who used solar radiation measurements for determining evaporation and crop water use in arid environments, was intrigued by the decreasing trends in solar radiation that he found in radiation records. Stanhill and Moreshet [32] analyzed data from 45 stations for the years 1958, 1965, 1975 and 1985, and found a statistically significant average worldwide decrease of Eg# totalling 5.3% (or 0.34 Wm 2a 2) from 1958 to 1985. Decreasing trends of the same order of magnitude were found for sites in Australia [33], Japan [34], the arctic [35], Antarctica [36], Israel [37] and Ireland [38]. The largest decrease, found

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in Hong Kong, was 1.8 Wm 2a 2, that is, a decrease in excess of 1% per year [39]. Other groups reported dimming for China [40], the former Soviet Union [41] and Germany [42,43]. Reductions in solar radiation were larger for urban industrial sites, but even at sites remote from pollution Eg# was usually decreasing at a rapid rate. Gilgen et al. [44] reviewed trends found in the GEBA archive. Their paper, entitled ‘Means and trends of short wave irradiance at the surface estimated from GEBA Data’, included analyses of accuracy and biases, and trends in Eg# for different regions of the world. The final sentence of the abstract noted that ‘on most continents, shortwave irradiance decreases significantly in large regions, and significant positive trends are observed only in four small regions’. Stanhill and Cohen [23] tabulated the negative trends for different sites around the world. Of the 30 stations where detailed analyses of trends had been published, at 28 Eg# had decreased and only at two, Dublin, Ireland and Griffith, Australia, had Eg# increased (by 0.56 and 0.76 Wm 2a 2, respectively). They also analysed solar radiation records from the geophysical year, 1958, and the years 1965, 1975, 1985 and 1992. These records were from between 145 (1958) and 303 (1992) stations whose measurements conformed to WMO standards. Average transmittance of a unit atmosphere for the northern hemisphere was 0.52 in 1957 and declined steadily to 0.44 in 1992 while that for the southern hemisphere averaged 0.57 until 1985 and declined between 1985 and 1992 to 0.52. A spline fit to the latitudinal distribution of Eg# showed that the decrease during the 34 a period had been especially large in the industrialized region of the northern hemisphere with a centre at 35 N and a width of 20 . This feature and an analysis of the various possible reasons for the dimming phenomenon, led to the conclusion that particulate aerosols, and especially those from anthropogenic sources, were the cause of the changes. Similar conclusions were drawn at about the same time by Liepert and Lohmann [45]. Many subsequent studies have highlighted similar trends based on data collected from the mid twentieth century and onwards. Trends for individual sites are highly variable, and for some places and some parts of the world no change or increases in solar radiation have been found.

3.2. From Dimming to Brightening Recent studies [46,47] have found evidence for a reversal in the negative trends in solar radiation, which, for many sites changed to positive trends in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The data sets analysed were from the GEBA archive [46] and, for the first time, long term trends in satellite data from 1983 to 2001 [47]. However, there is an inconsistency between the two studies, since the satellite data show brightening over the oceans and no trend over the land surfaces while the surface GEBA and BSRN measurements are

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mostly land based and show clear brightening during this period. The reversal in the trend is thought to be related to the decreases in air pollution in Europe and other parts of the western world following legislation that limited air pollution. The positive trend has not led to a full recovery in Eg# and current levels of solar radiation in most places where dimming took place are still below the values measured during the 1950s. A selection of widespread trends reported for Eg# is given in Table 2. A list of the publications on global dimming, brightening and related topics was compiled by M. Roderick at ANU and is kept more or less up to date. It can be found on the web at http://www.rsbs.anu.edu.au/ResearchGroups/EBG/ index.php. Several international meetings have been held to discuss these topics (Table 1). TABLE 1 International meetings held on changing surface solar radiation and related changes in evaporation Organizing Organization and event

Date

Session title

Location

Reference

AGU/CGU joint assembly

17 18 May 2004

Magnitude and Causes of Decreasing Surface Solar Radiation

Montreal, Canada

[91]

Australian Academy of Science International workshop

22 23 November 2004

Pan evaporation: An example of the detection and attribution of trends in climate variables

Canberra, Australia

[92]

EGU general assembly

15 20 April 2007

Surface Radiation Budget, Radiative Forcings and Climate Change

Vienna, Austria

AGU fall meeting

10 14 December 2007

Pan Evaporation Trends: Observations, Interpretations, and the Ecohydrological Implications

San Francisco, CA, USA

Israel Science Foundation international workshop

10 14 February 2008

Global dimming and brightening

Ein Gedi, Israel

EGU general assembly

13 18 April 2008

Surface Radiation Budget, Radiative Forcings and Climate Change

Vienna, Austria

[93]

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TABLE 2 Selected estimates of widespread trends in surface solar radiation from surface measurements and satellite-based estimates. Based on Ref. [94] Surface Energy trend per decade/ (Wm2)

Study

Time period

[23]

From mid 1950s to 1992

3

Trend analysis of about 30 sites of various lengths, and data from five years from 1957 to 1992 for >145 stations

[95]

1960 1990

2

Trend analysis of GEBA and US NREL data sets from 1960 to 1990

[44]

From mid 1950s to 1990

3

Statistics of the GEBA data set based on about 300 sites of various length

[51]

From mid 1950s to 1990

1.6

Analysis of GEBA data to constrain the “urbanization” effect. Separation of sparsely populated sites (0.1 million inhabitants)

4.1

Comments

[96]

1977 1990

2

Trend analysis of five records of the GMD data set from remote sites from South Pole to Barrow, Alaska

[46]

1993 2004

4.7

Trend analysis of 18 BSRN records

[46]

1985 2005

2.2

Decadal change between (1985 1995) and (1995 2005) based on 320 GEBA sites

1983 2001

1.6

Global. University of Maryland algorithm with ISCCP Clouds Global average Ocean surfaces Land surfaces

Satellite [47]

2.4 0.5 [97]

1984 2000

2.4

Global. ISCCP Clouds with own RT model

[58]

1984 2000

0.4 1 1

Global (ISCCP FD) Ocean (ISCCP FD) Land (ISCCP FD)

Notes: GMD Global monitoring division of NOAA, ISCCP FD Climatology Project result data sets.

International Satellite Cloud

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3.3. Eg# Prior to the 1950s Little is known about Eg# prior to the 1950s and since temperature changes then are well documented, such information could be valuable for understanding the influences of Eg# on climate. Stanhill and Cohen [18,19] used SSD data as proxies for Eg# based on recent simultaneous measurements of both measures, in order to deduce trends of Eg# from 1891 to 1987 for the US and from 1890 to 2004 for Japan. SSD was found to be well correlated with Eg# and therefore can serve as a proxy. The data from the US and Japan were from 106 and 65 stations with at least 70 and 35 a of data each, respectively. In the US mean SSD increased from 1891 to the 1930s and then decreased until the mid-1940s. In Japan a similar increase was observed from 1900 to the mid-1940s. This was followed by a decline until the late 1950s. Palle and Butler [22] found a decrease in SSD for four stations in Ireland for the period from 1890 to the 1940s. Sanchez-Lorenzo et al. [48] analysed SSD for the Iberian Peninsula for 1931 2004 and found a dimming trend from the 1950s to the early 1980s followed by brightening, but the early data (1931 1950) showed no clear trend. Thus, it is possible to obtain estimates of Eg# for the first half of the twentieth century and many SSD data sets exist, but more work is needed to understand this period.

3.4. Regional Changes The areal extent of the changes in global radiation and their global impact has been the subject of much debate and some investigation. Significant rates of dimming and brightening have been observed at many sites remote from major sources of air pollution, for example the polar regions [35,36], and the largest trends have been observed in heavily polluted regions (e.g. Hong Kong [39], India [49] and China [50]), suggesting a significant relationship between pollution rates and global radiation trends. Alpert et al. [51] found that dimming from the 1950s to the 1980s averaged 0.41 Wm 2a 2 for highly populated sites while for sparsely populated sites, that is, populations 6.5 km, b middle clouds, 6.5 km >H > 3.2 km, and c low clouds, H < 3.2 km. From Ref. [21].

2.5. The Influence of Cosmic Rays on the Earth’s Temperature Figure 4 shows a comparison of 11 year moving average Northern Hemisphere marine and land air temperature anomalies for 1935 1995 with CR intensity (constructed for Cheltenham/Fredericksburg for 1937 1975 and Yakutsk for 1953 1994, [41]) and Climax NM data, as well as with other parameters (unfiltered solar cycle length, sunspot numbers and reconstructed solar irradiance). From Fig. 4 one can see that the best correlation of global air temperature is with CR intensity, in accordance with the results described in Sections 2.1 2.4 above. According to Swensmark [6], the comparison of Fig. 4 with Fig. 2 shows that the increase of air temperature by 0.3 C corresponds to a decrease of CR intensity of 3.5% and a decrease of global cloudiness of 3%; this is equivalent to an increase of solar irradiance on the Earth’s surface of about 1:5 Wm 2 [42] and is about 5 times bigger than the solar cycle change of solar irradiance, which as we have seen, is only 0.3 Wm 2).

PART

I

Possible Causes of Climate Change

8

10

0.0

11

−0.1

12

140

0.0 −0.1

b

−2.5 −2.0

1935 1950 1965 1980 1995 Years

60 Years

0.2 Δt/⬚C

−3.0

Cosmic Ray Decrease/%

Δt/⬚C

0.1

80

−0.1

c −3.5

100

1935 1950 1965 1980 1995

Years

0.2

120

0.0

1935 1950 1965 1980 1995

a

0.1

Sunspots

0.1

160

0.2 Δt/⬚C

9

Solar Cycle length/Year

Δt/⬚C

0.2

180

0.1 0.0

1.0

0.5

0.0

−0.1

d

Δ Irradiance/W.m−2

50

1935 1950 1965 1980 1995 Years

FIGURE 4 Eleven year average Northern hemisphere marine and land air temperature anomalies, Dt, (broken curve) compared with: a, unfiltered solar cycle length; b, Eleven year average CR intensity (thick solid curve from ion chambers 1937 1994, normalized to 1965, and thin solid curve from Climax NM, normalized to ion chambers); c, eleven year average of sunspot numbers; and d, decade variation in reconstructed solar irradiance from Ref. [10] (zero level corresponds to 1367 Wm 2). From Ref. [6].

2.6. Cosmic Ray Influence on Weather during Maunder Minimum Figure 5 shows the situation in the Maunder minimum (a time when sunspots were rare) for: solar irradiance [10,43]); concentration of the cosmogenic isotope 10Be [44] a measure of CR intensity [1]); and reconstructed air surface temperature for the northern hemisphere [45]). The solar irradiance is almost constant during the Maunder minimum and about 0.24% (or about 0.82 Wm 2) lower than the present value (see Panel a in Fig. 5), but CR intensity and air surface temperature vary in a similar manner see above sections; with increasing CR intensity there is a decrease in air surface temperature (see Panels b and c in Fig. 5). The highest level of CR intensity was between 1690 1700, which corresponds to the minimum of air surface temperature [46] and also to the coldest decade (1690 1700).

3

The Role of Space Weather and Cosmic Ray Effects

Irradiance/W.m−2

Chapter

1368 1367 1366

Maunder minimum

1365 1364 1660

10Be

concentration/ppm

a 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8

0.2

1700 1680 Years

1720

Maunder minimum

1660

b

Δt/⬚C

51

1680 1700 Years

1720

Maunder minimum

0.4 0.6 0.8 1660

c

1680 1700 Years

1720

FIGURE 5 Situation in the Maunder minimum: a reconstructed solar irradiance [9]; b cosmo genic 10Be concentration [44]; c reconstructed relative change of air surface temperature, Dt, for the northern hemisphere [45]. From Swensmark [6].

2.7. The Influence of Long-Term Variations of Cosmic Ray Intensity on Wheat Prices (Related to Climate Change) in Medieval England and Modern USA Herschel’s observations [4] mentioned in Section 2.1, were based on the published wheat prices [47], and showed that five prolonged periods of sunspot numbers correlated with costly wheat. This idea was taken up by the English economist and logician William Stanley Jevons [48]. He directed his attention to the wheat prices from 1259 to 1400 and showed that the time intervals between high prices were close to 10 11 a. This work was later published by Rogers [49]. The coincidence of these intervals with the period of the recently discovered 11 year cycle of solar activity led him to suggest that the solar activity cycle was a ‘synchronisation’ factor in the fluctuations of wheat prices (Jevons [50]). As a next step, he extrapolated his theory to stock

52

PART

I

Possible Causes of Climate Change

markets of the nineteenth century in England and was impressed by a close coincidence of five stock exchange panics with five minima in solar spot numbers that preceded these panics. He suggested that both solar and economic activities are subjected to a harmonic process with the same constant period of 11 a. However, the subsequent discovery of the non-harmonic behaviour of solar cycles, with periods varying from 8 to 15 a, and the later observation of lack of coincidence between panics predicted by Jevons [48,50] and the actual ones, destroyed his argument. The Rogers [49] database was used by Pustil’nik et al. [51], Pustil’nik and Yom Din [52] to search for possible influences of solar activity and CR intensity on wheat prices (through climate changes). The graph of wheat prices as a function of time (Fig. 6) contains two specific features: 1. A transition from ‘low price’ state to ‘high price’ state during 1530 1630, possibly as a result of access to cheap silver, recently discovered New World. 2. The existence of two populations in the price sample: noise-like variations with low amplitude bursts and several bursts of large amplitude. Pustil’nik et al. [51], Pustil’nik and Yom Din [52], analysed the data and compared the distribution of intervals of price bursts with the distribution of the intervals between minimums of solar cycles (see Fig. 7). In their analysis they found that for the sunspot minimum minimum interval distribution the estimated parameters are: median 10.7 a; mean 11.02 a; standard deviation 1.53 a and for the price burst interval distribution, the estimated parameters are: median 11.0 a; mean 11.14 a; and standard deviation 1.44 a. The main problem with a comparison between the price and solar activity, is the absence of the time interval, common to sunspot observation data

Year’s Wheat Prices in the Middle Ages England 900 800

Year’s prices Long term model

700

Prices

600 500 400 300 200 100 0 1250

1300

1350

1400

1450 1500 Years

1550

1600

1650

1700

FIGURE 6 Wheat prices in England during 1259 1702 with a price transition at 1530 1630. From Refs. [51,52].

Chapter

The Role of Space Weather and Cosmic Ray Effects

3

53

Hystogram of Price Bursts Intervals

Number of intervals

14 12 10 8 6 4 2 15

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