Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
I’ve been reflecting over the last few days about how the climate system of the earth functions as a giant natural heat engine. A “heat engine”, whether natural or man-made, is a mechanism that converts heat into mechanical energy of some kind. In the case of the climate system, the heat of the sun is converted into the mechanical energy of the ocean and the atmosphere. The seawater and atmosphere are what are called the “working fluids” of the heat engine. The movement of the air and the seawater transports an almost unimaginably large amount of heat from the tropics to the poles. Now, none of the above are new ideas, or are original with me. I simply got to wondering about what the CERES data could show regarding the poleward transport of that energy by the climate heat engine. Figure 1 gives that result:
Figure 1. Exports of energy from the tropics, in W/m2, averaged over the exporting area. The figures show the net of the energy entering and leaving the TOA above each 1°x1° gridcell. It is calculated from the CERES data as solar minus upwelling radiation (longwave + shortwave). Of course, if more energy is constantly entering a TOA gridcell than is leaving it, that energy must be being exported horizontally. The average amount exported from between the two light blue bands is 44 W/m2 (amount exported / exporting area).
We can see some interesting aspects of the climate heat engine in this graph.
First, like all heat engines, the climate heat engine doesn’t work off of a temperature. It works off of a temperature difference. A heat engine needs both a hot end and a cold end. After the working fluid is heated at the hot end, and the engine has extracted work from incoming energy, the remaining heat must be rejected from the working fluid. To do this, the working fluid must be moved to some location where the temperature is lower than at the hot end of the engine.
As a result, there is a constant flow of energy across the blue line. In part this is because at the poles, so little energy is coming from the sun. Over Antarctica and the Arctic ocean, the sun is only providing about a quarter of the radiated longwave energy, only about 40 W/m2, with the remainder being energy exported from the tropics. The energy is transported by the two working fluids, seawater and air. In total, the CERES data shows that there is a constant energy flux across those blue lines of about six petawatts (6e+15 watts) flowing northwards, and six petawatts flowing southwards for a total of twelve petawatts. And how much energy is twelve petawatts when it’s at home?
Well … at present all of humanity consumes about fifteen terawatts (15e+12) on a global average basis. This means that the amount of energy constantly flowing from the equator to the poles is about eight-hundred times the total energy utilized by humans … as I said, it’s an almost unimaginable amount of energy. Not only that, but that 12 petawatts is only 10% of the 120 petawatts of solar energy that is constantly being absorbed by the climate system.
Next, over the land, the area which is importing energy is much closer to the equator than over the sea. I assume this is because of the huge heat capacity of the ocean, and its consequent ability to transport the heat further polewards.
Next, overall the ocean is receiving more energy than it radiates, so it is exporting energy … and the land is radiating more than it receives, so it is getting energy from the ocean. In part, this is because of the difference in solar heating. Figure 2, which looks much like Figure 1, shows the net amount of solar radiation absorbed by the climate system. I do love investigating this stuff, there’s so much to learn. For example, I was unaware that the land, on average, receives about 40 W/m2 less energy from the sun than does the ocean, as is shown in Figure 2.
(Daedalus, of course, would not let this opportunity pass without pointing out that this means we could easily control the planet’s temperature by the simple expedient of increasing the amount of land. For each square metre of land added, we get 40 W/m2 less absorbed energy over that square metre, which is about ten doublings of CO2. And the amount would be perhaps double that in tropical waters. So Daedalus calculates that if we make land by filling in shallow tropical oceans equal to say a mere 5% of the planet, it would avoid an amount of downwelling radiation equal to a doubling of CO2. The best part of Daedalus’s plan is his slogan, “We have to pave the planet to save the planet” … but I digress).
Figure 2. Net solar energy entering the climate system, in watts per square metre (W/m2). Annual averages.
You can see the wide range in the amount of sunlight hitting the earth, from a low of 48 W/m2 at the poles to a high of 365 W/m2 in parts of the tropics.
Now, I bring up these two Figures to highlight the concept of the climate system as a huge natural heat engine. As with all heat engines, energy enters at the hot end, in this case the tropics. It is converted into mechanical motion of seawater and air, which transports the excess heat to the poles where it is radiated to space.
Now, the way that we control the output of a heat engine is by using something called a “throttle”. A throttle controls the amount of energy entering a heat engine. A throttle is what is controlled by the gas pedal in a car. As the name suggests, a throttle restricts the energy entering the system. As a result, the throttle controls the operating parameters (temperature, work produced, etc.) of the heat engine.
So the question naturally arises … in the climate heat engine, what functions as the throttle? The answer, of course, is the clouds. They restrict the amount of energy entering the system. And where is the most advantageous place to throttle the heat engine shown in Figure 2? Well, you have to do it at the hot end where the energy enters the system. And you’d want to do it near the equator, where you can choke off the most energy.
In practice, a large amount of this throttling occurs at the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). As the name suggests, this is where the two separately circulating hemispheric air masses interact. On average this is north of the equator in the Pacific and Atlantic, and south of the equator in the Indian Ocean. The ITCZ is revealed most clearly by Figure 3, which shows how much sunlight the planet is reflecting.
Figure 3. Total reflected solar radiation. Areas of low reflection are shown in red, because the low reflection leads to increased solar heating. The average ITCZ can be seen as the yellow/green areas just above the Equator in the Atlantic and Pacific, and just below the Equator in the Indian Ocean.
In Figure 3, we can see how the ITCZ clouds are throttling the incoming solar energy. Were it not for the clouds, the tropical oceans in that area would reflect less than 80 W/m2 (as we see in the red areas outlined above and below the ITCZ) and the oceans would be much warmer. By throttling the incoming sunshine, areas near the Equator end up much cooler than they would be otherwise.
Now … all of the above has been done with averages. But the clouds don’t form based on average conditions. They form based only and solely on current conditions. And the nature of the tropical clouds is that generally, the clouds don’t form in the mornings, when the sea surface is cool from its nocturnal overturning.
Instead, the clouds form after the ocean has warmed up to some critical temperature. Once it passes that point, and generally over a period of less than an hour, a fully-developed cumulus cloud layer emerges. The emergence is threshold based. The important thing to note about this process is that the critical threshold at which the clouds form is based on temperature and the physics of air, wind and water. The threshold is not based on CO2. It is not a function of instantaneous forcing. The threshold is based on temperature and pressure and the physics of the immediate situation.
This means that the tropical clouds emerge earlier when the morning is warmer than usual. And when the morning is cooler, the cumulus emerge later or not at all. So if on average there is a bit more forcing, from solar cycles or changes in CO2 or excess water vapor in the air, the clouds form earlier, and the excess forcing is neatly counteracted.
Now, if my hypothesis is correct, then we should be able to find evidence for this dependence of the tropical clouds on the temperature. If the situation is in fact as I’ve stated above, where the tropical clouds act as a throttle because they increase when the temperatures go up, then evidence would be found in the correlation of surface temperature with albedo. Figure 4 shows that relationship.
Figure 4. Correlation of surface temperature and albedo, calculated on a 1°x1° gridcell basis. Blue and green areas are where albedo and temperature are negatively correlated. Red and orange show positive correlation, where increasing albedo is associated with increasing temperature.
Over the extratropical land, because of the association of ice and snow (high albedo) and low temperatures, the correlation between temperature and albedo is negative. However, remember that little of the suns energy is going there.
In the tropics where the majority of energy enters the system, on the other hand, warmer surface temperatures lead to more clouds, so the correlation is positive, and strongly positive in some areas.
Now, consider what happens when increasing clouds cause a reduction in temperature, and increasing temperatures cause an increase in clouds. At some point, the two lines will cross, and the temperature will oscillate around that set point. When the surface is cooler than that temperature, clouds will form later, and there will be less clouds, sun will pour in uninterrupted, and the surface will warm up.
And when the surface is warmer than that temperature, clouds will form earlier, there will be more clouds, and higher albedo, and more reflection, and the surface will cool down.
Net result? A very effective thermostat. This thermostat works in conjunction with other longer-term thermostatic phenomena to maintain the amazing thermal stability of the planet. People agonize about a change of six-tenths of a degree last century … but consider the following:
• The climate system is only running at about 70% throttle.
• The average temperature of the system is ~ 286K.
• The throttle of the climate system is controlled by nothing more solid than clouds, which are changing constantly.
• The global average surface temperature is maintained at a level significantly warmer than what would be predicted for a planet without an atmosphere containing water vapor, CO2, and other greenhouse gases.
Despite all of that, over the previous century the total variation in temperature was ≈ ± 0.3K. This is a variation of less than a tenth of one percent.
For a system as large, complex, ephemeral, and possibly unstable as the climate, I see this as clear evidence for the existence of a thermostatic system of some sort controlling the temperature. Perhaps the system doesn’t work as I have posited above … but it is clear to me that there must be some kind of system keeping the temperature variations within a tenth of a percent over a century.
Regards to all,
w.
PS—The instability of a modeled climate system without some thermostatic mechanism is well illustrated by the thousands of runs of the ClimatePredictionNet climate model:
Note how many of the runs end up in unrealistically high or low temperatures, due to the lack of any thermostatic control mechanisms.
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Pamela Gray says:
December 22, 2013 at 8:37 am
The variation in the energy available in Solar parameters needed to change something as strong as the Jets (through expansion/retraction of the absolute height/depth of the mesosphere thus relaxing/squeezing the jets north or south) would have to be many times greater than it actually is in watts per square meter.
Here
http://earth.nullschool.net/#current/wind/isobaric/250hPa/orthographic=0.00,90.00,400
you can see a nice Rossby (planetary) wave, working its way around the planet. However it gets occasionally thrown of course. If you take a good look you can see it breaks up just south of Kamchatka and further on it reforms into its classical shape. Kamchatka peninsula has 3 or 4 active volcanoes continuously pumping warm gases which push upwards the tropo-pause, but no eruptions at the moment.
When eruption happens for prolong period (few weeks) then the effect is much stronger, the warm tropospheric air dome rises into stratosphere, the result is sudden stratospheric warming SSW.
Here you can see there is no SSW this December,
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/stratosphere/temperature/70mb9065.gif
while the last one it was on its way. To find what was going on in Kamchatka last D-J you could start here:
http://www.vukcevic.talktalk.net/NH.htm
if inclined to pursue source of power needed to break up jet-stream.
TB,
Read your link again…. the big maximum is at midafternoon with a secondary peak (not THE maximum) in the predawn.
v/r,
David Riser
Or the heat radiates directly back to space as it would in regions of hot surface and dry overlying air, or it radiates to space at the tops of convective storms. It is a complicated heat engine with cold reservoirs at a variety of temperatures.
With regard to the “throttle” of the climate system one could generalize to say that all irreversibilities act to throttle this system. For example, mixing of dry and wet air is an important irreversibility, and precipitation falling through air is another such irreversibilty acting as it does through drag. Without precipitation, even at the sort of efficiencies one finds for the climate system, we would observe wind speeds of hundreds of miles per hour routinely.
Here is some up to date data associating low solar activity with a warmer stratosphere which is the opposite of conventional climatology as espoused by Leif and others:
http://theweathercentre.blogspot.co.uk/2013/09/persistent-stratospheric-warming.html
Stephen Richards says:
December 22, 2013 at 2:03 am
Check out MeteoEarth, it’s like Stephen’s resource … but in color.
w.
Stephen Wilde says:
December 22, 2013 at 1:27 pm
Here is some up to date data associating low solar activity with a warmer stratosphere
From your link:
“All of that said, if we continue to see the current sunspot numbers stay at unusually low values (circled in blue), the stratosphere should continue to warm”
Except that we did not continue to see low solar activity, on the contrary, solar activity is now at its ‘second peak’ with recent values above 100…
As solar peaks go, this ‘second peak’ is among the least active in a century or more.
GlynnMhor says:
December 22, 2013 at 1:36 pm
As solar peaks go, this ‘second peak’ is among the least active in a century or more.
As predicted…
“Except that we did not continue to see low solar activity, on the contrary, solar activity is now at its ‘second peak’ with recent values above 100…”
What did the stratosphere do?
Mind you, I think the short term variations can be misleading and I prefer to regard as significant the longer term lack of stratospheric cooling from 1994 to date as the sun became less active. As my previous link shows there is some sign of warming from the 1994 low in at least two of the data sets.
The next few years should clarify the issue.
Stephen Wilde says:
December 22, 2013 at 1:37 pm
Mind you, I think the short term variations can be misleading
Yet you link to a report of such when convenient…
“Yet you link to a report of such when convenient…”
Just following your example.
I gave you a link to the 1958 to 2012 record which is clear enough to all but you.
Stephen Wilde says:
December 22, 2013 at 1:45 pm
“Yet you link to a report of such when convenient…”
Just following your example.
Lame excuse for bad behavior.
I gave you a link to the 1958 to 2012 record which is clear enough to all but you.
As your link says: “For most of the last two decades, there has been little trend, but no sign of a reversal. “
phlogiston says:
December 22, 2013 at 3:46 am
A new construct? American-English? Sorry, neither one.
So “off of” is common English as it is actually spoken, not as the grammar nazis would have it spoken … sorry, phlogiston. Not buying it. I use English as it is used.
In this case, however, I would actively defend the usage for clarity, because “works off” means something different than “works off of”. “Works off” is a phrase that has a specific meaning. It means to remove something by work, like say to work off a debt, or to work off excess poundage. Consider the statement:
Extreme exertion works off the extra fat stored in your body.
That has a specific meaning, which is that exertion can help you lose (“work off”) weight. On the other hand we have this statement:
Extreme exertion works off of the extra fat stored in your body.
This means something very different. It is a description of how extreme exertion is fueled by (works off of) the energy stored in your fat.
Since I meant the latter sense (“is fueled or driven by”, rather than “loses or removes”), I used “off of” rather than “off”.
Gotta admit … grammar nazis are bad enough, but folks like you, unclear on both the etymology and the meaning? Makes me glad the sun is shining and the air is warm.
Finally, I cannot find any examples of anyone using a hyphen in “American-English” as you do above, nor do I think that there is any justification for its use. In this case, “American” is just an adjective describing what kind of English you’re talking about, no hyphens need apply.
However, I’m not complaining in the slightest. I’m just role-modeling a grammar nazi for you. Me, I don’t care if you use a hyphen or not. Your meaning was perfectly clear, with or without a hyphen, which is all that I ask for in any language.
Best regards,
w.
David Riser says:
December 22, 2013 at 1:15 pm
TB,
Read your link again…. the big maximum is at midafternoon with a secondary peak (not THE maximum) in the predawn.
v/r,
David Riser
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
David, there is a second max but it seems the nocturnal one is involved with the most areal cloud and heaviest rainfall (meteorological explanation is via radiative cooling of cloud tops and consequent build of cloud depth).
And I read the paper differently to you – I don’t read anything about the big max in the pm. The contrary actually….
“Maximum enhancement of deep convection over the western Pacific occurs between 0600 and 0900 local time.”
“Throughout the equatorial Pacific region, the early morning maximum is typically deep convection whereas the afternoon maximum is generally mesoscale cirrus-anvil clouds.”
“Both observations indicate maximum convective activity in the predawn hours over the tropical oceans….”
“The variation is dominated by heavier rain during the night from 2200 to 0600 Local Time, and lighter rain in the remaining part of the day.”
“Cumulus convection in the morning and afternoon consists of shallower convective elements, and the nocturnal convective system consists of deeper convective cells and larger areas of stratiform clouds.”
johnmarshall says:
December 22, 2013 at 4:04 am
Say what? Deep convection, fueled by thunderstorms at the ITCZ, is what drives the motion of the atmosphere and the polewards transport of the heat that I describe in the post. I didn’t ignore convection in the slightest.
Miss the point much? Take a deep breath, and look up the link to Daedalus. It’s humor, old son.
Fortunately, I never let random internet popups who miss the point dampen anything of mine … if I did, I’d be wet all the time.
In any case, if your “GHG fueled season” (whatever that might mean ) is dampened, I hope this dries it out.
w.
Stephen Wilde says:
December 22, 2013 at 4:50 am
Seems there’s been a misunderstanding, Stephen. The people I call “pressure heads” are those that think that on a planet with a GHG-free atmosphere, say an argon atmosphere, that pressure alone can raise the temperature of the surface.
But if that were true, then the surface would be constantly radiating more energy than it is receiving. Since that is not possible, we can be sure that pressure alone cannot raise the surface temperature.
That’s what I mean by “pressure-heads”.
w.
Willis Eschenbach says:
December 22, 2013 at 2:28 pm
The people I call “pressure heads” are those that think that on a planet with a GHG-free atmosphere, say an argon atmosphere, that pressure alone can raise the temperature of the surface.
All astronomers are then ‘pressure heads’ as it is generally accepted that pressure alone heated the Sun, as it formed out of a contracting cloud of interstellar gas, until it became so hot that nuclear fusion was initiated…
hunter says:
December 22, 2013 at 5:11 am
There have been analyses of the climate as a heat engine before. As I said at the top, that is not my idea. One of the best of those analyses is here.
However, the idea that the temperature-determined time of onset of tropical clouds and thunderstorms is a main regulator of the temperature of the globe is my own, as far as I know. I think the same is true for the idea that the PDO regulates the temperature by either impeding or encouraging polewards heat flow. Finally, I think that the idea that the El Nino / La Nina alteration functions to regulate the temperature by pumping warm tropical water to the poles when the tropics start to overheat is my own idea as well.
However, the origin of the ideas is not as important as the ideas. I differ from the majority of current climate scientists by saying that the climate is not the linear slave of the forcing. I say it is a regulated system, where the temperature is kept within bounds by a variety of interlocking and overlapping thermoregulatory phenomena.
w.
lsvalgaard says:
December 22, 2013 at 2:33 pm
Thanks, Leif. Those of us who are not astronomers generally don’t think much about the insides of stars and other exotic locations. As a result, I forgot to specify boundary conditions.
So let me say that I was not talking about pressures large enough to create fusion … nor about gravities strong enough to create black holes. Just, you know … planets and planetary atmospheres.
w.
Willis Eschenbach says:
December 22, 2013 at 2:48 pm
Just, you know … planets and planetary atmospheres.
Like Jupiter… “The temperature and pressure inside Jupiter increase steadily toward the core. At the phase transition region where hydrogen—heated beyond its critical point—becomes metallic, it is believed the temperature is 10,000 K”…
phlogiston says:
“Off of” is a cacophonous new American-English grammar construct. What does it mean? Its horrible, stop it!
“Construct” is a verb. Construction is the noun. Abuse of verbs as nouns is a horrible American-English habit, stop it! Grammar is a noun , grammatical is the adjective. Abusing nouns as adjectives is a horrible American-English habit, stop it!
Use of the correct parts of language is a good habit. May I suggest “grammatical construction”.
I trust you use a spelling checker rather than a ‘spell check’.
Pressure heads – what like Boyle. You once made some good posts with a novel – even if sometimes naive (by others judgement not mine) – interpretation. But what is the point of this piece – no mention of equilibrium nor even entropy, which even if only theoretical (given scale or complexity of the system) is important to the discussion.
Can I suggest you spend some time consulting climate modellers before your next post – I’m not suggesting that this is the subject of this post but somehow I think it will be the subject of your next.
Position of the ITCZ is probably what causes the “mysterious” polar see-saw. Varying proportions of heat engine throughput get directed north and south.
Greg
Why do you bother?
Thank god for the tropics, otherwise we would freeze our privates off here in Canada. Oh, wait a minute.