Climate as a Result of the Earth Heat Reflection
Enerģija un Pasaule 2009
Jēkabs Barkāns, Diāna Žalostība

The authors show that the mean global temperature – and, therefore, climate – is determined mainly by the reflected portion of the total heat received from the Sun. The heat reflected directly by infra-red radiation is insufficient for maintenance of the temperature necessary for the Earth life, since it is limited by absorption windows created by green-house gases (mainly water molecules). The deficient heat is transported by a strong vertical convective air stream – a component of the total air circulation. This heat – limited only by Newton’s law – is delivered to the upper troposphere layers not containing water molecules, from where it is dissipated, practically unlimitedly, at the infra-red radiation wavelengths corresponding to cooled media. The convection, in compliance with Newton’s law, creates a negative feedback, which stabilizes the processes of temperature changes on the Earth reducing them by half.


Keywords
climate change

Barkāns, J., Žalostība, D. Climate as a Result of the Earth Heat Reflection. Enerģija un Pasaule, 2009, No. 3, pp.22-26. ISSN 1407-5911.

Publication language
Latvian (lv)
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