SkS Analogy 6 – Speakers, tuning forks, and global warming

Posted on 29 May 2017 by Evan

Tag Line

The physics of global warming by greenhouse gases is well understood and can be illustrated by items we use every day.

Elevator Statement

Simple, well-understood physics indicate the following:

  • Sound waves vibrate speakers (think microphone1) and vibrating speakers make sound waves
  • Sound waves vibrate tuning forks and vibrating tuning forks make sound waves
  • Infrared waves vibrate CO2 molecules (increased vibration means more energy, which means warmer) and vibrating CO2 molecules make infrared waves (think CO2 lasers)

Almost everybody is familiar with microphones, speakers, and tuning forks. These are items you can see, touch, and feel, so they are familiar. Even though we cannot see greenhouse gases like CO2, they operate the same as speakers and tuning forks: they absorb and reemit waves, just on a very small scale. When they absorb waves they trap heat, warming the atmosphere.

Excitation of tuning fork by sound and CO2 molecule by infrared radiation (graphics by jg).

Climate Science

The physics of how CO2 molecules interact with infrared waves was first discovered in the 1850’s. Einstein had not even been born by the time that we knew that CO2 combined with infrared radiation caused warming in the atmosphere. By the 1890’s the first calculation was made of how much the atmosphere would warm up if we doubled CO2 concentrations (i.e., climate sensitivity). This work was done and published by Svante Arrhenius, a Nobel prize winner, and was titled “On the Influence of Carbonic Acid in the Air upon the Temperature of the Ground” (published in the Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science, 1896). Since Arrhenius’ original calculations, estimates of the climate sensitivity have been refined, and the current average estimate from the IPCC is about 3°C of warming for doubling CO2.

Study of the interaction between infrared radiation and atmospheric gases was significantly ramped up in the 1950’s when the US Air Force developed heat-seeking missiles. The Air Force wanted their sensors to “see” the hot exhaust of airplane engines, and so they had to learn what wavelengths were not absorbed by gases such as CO2. In the process of their studies, they learned what wavelengths of light CO2 does and does not absorb. The physics of how CO2 molecules and infrared radiation interact has also been used to develop CO2 lasers. If you still question whether we understand the physics that govern the relationship between CO2 and infrared radiation, try putting your iPhone in front of an operating CO2 laser and watching it vaporize. Seeing is believing.

For a more in-depth look, see the “The History of Climate Science” by John Mason.

By now the physics that tells us that increasing atmospheric CO2 levels increases atmospheric warming is well understood by all major academies of science, the Vatican, the insurance industry (they see the rising financial losses from increasing weather-related disasters), the US military (they refer to Climate Change as a threat multiplier), and many others. More than 97% of climate scientists agree that increasing greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere are causing the Earth to warm up. What does it say when an organization like the United Nations, which acts cautiously by consensus of most of the world’s leaders, states the following regarding the link between CO2 and global warming (http://www.un.org/en/sections/issues-depth/climate-change/index.html)?

“There are some basic well-established scientific links:

  • The concentration of GHGs in the earth’s atmosphere is directly linked to the average global temperature on Earth;
  • The concentration has been rising steadily, and mean global temperatures along with it, since the time of the Industrial Revolution;
  • The most abundant GHG, carbon dioxide (CO2), is the product of burning fossil fuels.”

Put more CO2 into the atmosphere, and there are more CO2 molecules absorbing infrared radiation. CO2 molecules share their energy with the surrounding air molecules, the atmosphere heats up, and so do we.

It is basic physics. The same physics known for over 150 years and illustrated by a common, musical, tuning fork.

1. A microphone is really just a small speaker used in reverse.

For a more in-depth look at the detailed physics that governs the interaction between GHGs, infrared radiation, and ultimate heating, see the following SkS articles.

Is the CO2 effect saturated?

Rob Hobeycutt’s chapter on “Radiative Gases”.