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Unit Four: The Greenhouse Effect
第四课 温室效应
New words:
Triple
三倍于
quadruple
四倍于
National Academy of Science
国家科学院
Impact
影响
effect
Feedback
反馈
annual
每年的
Seasonal
每季的
Expand
扩展
extend spread
Antarctic
南极洲
Greenland
格陵兰
Flood
洪水泛滥
Bangladesh
孟加拉
Bay of Bengal
孟加拉湾
(BOB)
Timely
定时的,及时的
Zone
区域
region
Infrared radiation
红外辐射
Climatic feedback
气候反馈
Snow cover
雪盖
Et al.
等等(人)
etc.
等等(物)
4
5
6
7
辐射
物体以电磁波或粒子流形式向周围传递或交换能量的方式。
电磁波谱
辐射的基本知识
辐射是太阳能传输到地球的唯一途径
大气窗
:
7~13
大气中的辐射传输过程
大气对短波的影响
吸收
散射
反射
吸收
逆辐射
大气对长波的影响
ppm:part per million
P1:
①
Man is reversing millions of years of natural evolution by putting into the atmosphere carbon that had been sequestered over the ages as fossil fuels.
②
Atmospheric concentrations of CO2
are likely to
double, and possibly triple, by 2100.
③
Because no historical precedent exists, reasonable
expectations
about future climate must be based on scientific evidence, not geological records. ④After evaluating the available evidence, the National Academy of Sciences concluded
that a doubling of atmospheric concentrations of CO2 would warm the earth’s average temperature 1.5-4.5℃
.
P2:
①
The greenhouse effect of the atmosphere has never been doubted.
②
More of the sun’s radiation is visible light, which passes through the atmosphere largely
undeterred
.
③
When the radiation strikes the earth, it warms the surface, which then radiates the heat as infrared radiation. However, atmospheric CO
2
, water vapor, and some other gases absorb the infrared radiation rather than allow it to pass undeterredly through the atmosphere to space.
④
Because the atmosphere traps the heat and warms the earth in a manner somewhat analogous to the glass panels of a greenhouse, this phenomenon is generally
known as
the “greenhouse effect”. Without this effect, the earth would be 33℃(60℉)colder that it is currently.
P3: ① The extent to which CO
2
absorbs heat has been known for almost a century, Scientists show that doubling of atmospheric CO
2
would raise the average temperature1.2℃ if nothing else in the earth’s climatic system changed. ② However, many parts of the climate will change, amplifying
the direct impact of CO
2
. ③ Because these changes are not completely understood, the total warming is difficult to estimate. ④ The current uncertainty
surrounding the impact of CO
2
on average temperature
is centered around these climatic “feedback”, not the direct warming from CO
2
.
P4
:
① The most important feedback will result from the warmer atmosphere’s ability to retain moisture. ② Because water vapor also absorbs infrared radiation, additional heating will result . ③ Hanson er al. estimate that double CO
2
would increase the atmosphere’s water vapor content 30%, heating the earth and additional 1.4
℃
.
P5: ① Another important positive feedback concerns the
impact
of snow and ice cover
on
the earth’s albedo, the extent to which it reflects sunlight. ② Ice and snow reflect most of the sun’s radiation, while water and soil absorb it. ③ An increase in surface temperatures would melt snow on land and floating ice and
thereby
allow the earth to absorb energy that would otherwise be reflected back into space. ④ Hanson et al. estimate an additional warming of 0.4℃ from the albedo effect.
P6: ① A feedback that is less understood is the impact of a global warming on clouds, which also reflect sunlight into space. ② The effects of clouds on the earth’s albedo depend on their heights and other properties, as well as the extent of cloud cover. ③ Thus, the impact of a global warming on clouds is somewhat uncertain. ④ Nevertheless, with somewhat less confidence, Hanson et al. estimate a 2% reduction in cloud cover and a resulting warming of 0.5
℃
. ⑤ They also estimate that increase in cloud height would result in an additional warming of 0.5
℃,
for a total impact of 1.0
℃
from clouds.
P7
:
① Although the increase in the average temperature of the earth is a convenient shorthand description of CO2 induced climate change, it masks important regional implications. ② Most searchers agree that polar temperature would increase two to
three times
the earth’s average increase. ③ The world’s climate depends largely on circulation patterns by which the atmosphere and the oceans transport heat from warm to cold regions.
P7
:
④ As a result, any significant change in the difference between equatorial and polar temperatures could dramatically affect climatic patterns. ⑤ A particularly important effect of these changes will be shifts in annual and seasonal precipitation and evaporation, with some areas gaining and other losing. ⑥ Furthermore, because hurricanes require an ocean temperature of 27℃ or warmer, a global warming could allow hurricanes to form at higher latitudes and during a greater part of the year. ⑦ These changes could be important to coastal communities.
P8
:
① A more immediate(
直接的)
concern is that the
projected
global warming could raise the sea as much as one meter in the next century by heating ocean water, which would then expand, and by causing mountain glaciers and parts of ice sheets in West Antarctica ,East Antarctica, and Greenland to melt or slide into the oceans. ② Thus , the sea could reach heights unprecedented in the history of civilization until this effort. ③ No one had attempted to forecast sea level rise in specific years or determine its importance to today’s activities.
P9: ① If this prediction comes true, the water will flood over 15 percent if Bangladesh’s territory, about 12 to 15 percent of Egypt’s cultivated land and significantly reduce the territory of many island countries. ② In the United States, thousands of square miles of land could be lost, particularly in low-lying areas such as the Mississippi Delta, where the land is also subsiding at approximately one meter per century. ③ Storm damage, already estimated at over three billion dollars per year nationwide, could also increase the salinity of marshes, estuaries, and aquifers, disrupting marine life and possibly threatening some drinking water supplies .
④ The greenhouse gases are also damaging the ozone layer surrounding the earth which protects human beings from ultraviolet radiation. ⑤ Research shows that cancer could increase by 3 percent for every 1 percent reduction in the ozone layer. ⑥ Fortunately, the most adverse(
不利的)
effects can be avoided if timely actions are taken.
P10
:
Although the climatic changes that could result from CO
2
emissions is poorly understood, there is complete agreement that CO
2
concentrations are increasing.
P11
: ①
Approximately one-half the CO
2
released by combustion of fossil fuels has remained in the atmosphere. ② It is generally believed that most of the remaining CO
2
has dissolved into the oceans. ③ Although tropical deforestation and cement production also
result in
CO
2
emission, their contribution have been and will continue to be much less important.
P12
: ①
Controlling the greenhouse gases, especially the increasing discharge
(排放)
of carbon dioxide has already become a key problem. ② The global community must
make efforts to
reduce the greenhouse effect.
P13
: ①
In the next few decades, however, CO2 emissions are
unlikely
to be curtailed, either voluntarily or by regulation. ② The world’s infrastructure is built around fossil fuels. ③ The cost
(成本)
of using coal, gas and oil is low compared with nuclear and solar power, and this relative cost advantage
(优势)
is expected to continue. ④ Therefore, a voluntary reduction in CO2 emissions is unlikely.
P14
: ①
The only government action that could successfully reduce CO
2
emissions would be to curtail the use of fossil fuels. ② Emission controls for CO
2
from power plants
(电厂)
would at least quadruple the cost of electricity. ③ For smaller users of fossil fuels, such as homes and motor vehicles, control is not even feasible. ④ Other plans, such as sequestering carbon in massive tree plantings, are even less plausible.
P15
: ①
Even if political leaders decide to take drastic
(严厉的)
actions to limit worldwide consumption of fossil fuels, it is probably already
too
late
to
prevent significant rises in global temperatures and sea level. ② A recent study investigated the impact of drastic energy policy changes on the expected timing of a greenhouse warming (Seidel and Keyes,1983). ③ The authors concluded that such policies could have important impact by 2100, but would not substantially delay the 2
°
C warming expected by 2040.
④ They estimated that a 300 percent tax on fossil fuels would delay the 2 C warming by only five years, and that even a worldwide ban on coal, shale
(页岩)
oil, and synthetic fuels would delay the warming by only twenty-five years, if implemented by 2000. ⑤ Furthermore, such a ban would delay the rise in sea level expected through 2040 by only twelve years.
P16
: ①
The political feasibility of instituting
(制定)
such a ban by 2000 is also doubtful, because only a worldwide agreement to curtail emission could be successful. ② Any individual nation that curtails its own emissions will
delay
the
day
when CO
2
concentrations double
by
a few years at most. ③ Furthermore, because energy costs would increase for any nation that curtails its emissions, that nation’s industries would be placed at a competitive disadvantage compared with those of the rest of the world.
④ Finally, political leaders would require proof that such a policy would be more beneficial than adapting to higher CO2 levels. ⑤ Such proof will probably remain impossible to provide for the foreseeable future.
P17
: ①
The impact of increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases will almost certainly be an unprecedented global warming. ② Some people have suggested that this warming may be offset because the earth would otherwise
(另外的方式)
be entering a cool period. ③ However, a natural cooling would take place over tens of thousands of years and is thus unlikely to significantly offset the global warming in the next century. ④ Even a drastic increase in volcanic activity would offset less than 10 percent of the projected rise in sea level.
P18
: ①
To meet the challenge of a global warming, society will need accurate information concerning the likely effects of sea level rise. ② Unfortunately, communities, corporations, and individuals do not by themselves have sufficient resources or incentives
(鼓励)
to undertake the basic scientific research required to reduce existing uncertainties. ③ This responsibility falls upon national governments throughout the world. ④ Only their efforts can provide the information that decision makers will need.