Global Warming and Greenhouse Gases Reading Assignment



Similar documents
GETTING TO THE CORE: THE LINK BETWEEN TEMPERATURE AND CARBON DIOXIDE

degrees Fahrenheit. Scientists believe it's human activity that's driving the temperatures up, a process

FACTS ABOUT CLIMATE CHANGE

This fact sheet provides an overview of options for managing solid

What Is Heat? What Is Heat?

Materials Needed: Time Needed: Adaptations: 2 flyswatters (optional) Vocabulary Definitions (below) Vocabulary Scramble Sheets (below)

READING COMPREHENSION I SIR ISAAC NEWTON

The Earth s Atmosphere

Teacher notes for activity: What is global warming?

The atmosphere has a number of gases, often in tiny amounts, which trap the heat given out by the Earth.

BBC Learning English Talk about English Insight plus Part 3 Global Warming

Worksheet A Environmental Problems

The Atmosphere. Introduction Greenhouse Effect/Climate Change/Global Warming

Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

TeachingEnglish Lesson plans. Climate change. Worksheet A - Climate change the evidence Match the questions to the answers about climate change.

Economic Development and the Risk of Global Climate Change

climate science A SHORT GUIDE TO This is a short summary of a detailed discussion of climate change science.

Systems Thinking and Modeling Climate Change Amy Pallant, Hee-Sun Lee, and Sarah Pryputniewicz

Oxygen Give and Take. Correlation to National Science Education Standards

BRSP-7 Page 1. A Open B Covered C Covered / Water. Two different experiments are presented, each experiment using a different pair of models:

Global Warming. Charles F. Keller

1. At which temperature would a source radiate the least amount of electromagnetic energy? 1) 273 K 3) 32 K 2) 212 K 4) 5 K

Clouds and the Energy Cycle

Consider How can you collect solar energy for use in your school? What are other alternatives?

The Polar Climate Zones

Energy Pathways in Earth s Atmosphere

Climate Change Mini-Simulation: Background Guide

The Solubility of Calcium Carbonate

Lesson Plan Simulating the Greenhouse Effect in a Terrarium.

Introduction to the Greenhouse Effect

Module 2.2. Heat transfer mechanisms

CARBON THROUGH THE SEASONS

Generating Heat. Part 1: Breathing Earth. Part 2: The Growth of Carbon Emitters. Introduction: Materials:

MCQ - ENERGY and CLIMATE

R enewable. & Nonrenewable Energy COMPARE AND CONTRAST Thoughtful Education Press, LLC All rights reserved.

Can Gases Act Like a Greenhouse?

2. What kind of energy is stored in food? A. chemical energy B. heat energy C. kinetic energy D. light energy

ATM S 111, Global Warming: Understanding the Forecast

Climate Change: A Local Focus on a Global Issue Newfoundland and Labrador Curriculum Links

T E A C H E R S N O T E S

Nonrenewable Natural Gas. Natural Gas Basics. How Was Natural Gas Formed?

(Walter Glogowski, Chaz Shapiro & Reid Sherman) INTRODUCTION

The Science and Ethics of Global warming. Global warming has become one of the central political and scientific issues of

Review 1. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Facing the Challenges of Climate Change A GUIDE FOR CITIZEN THOUGHT AND ACTION

Name: Class: Date: 10. Some substances, when exposed to visible light, absorb more energy as heat than other substances absorb.

«Introduce a tax on Carbon Dioxide»

Atmospheric Layers. Ionosphere. Exosphere. Thermosphere. Mesosphere. Stratosphere. Troposphere. mi (km) above sea level 250 (400) 50 (80) 30 (50)

Friday 20 January 2012 Morning

Ecology Pre-Test (High School)

WHY IS BREATHING SO IMPORTANT?

Carbon monoxide. General information

Sustainable Energy Sources By: Sue Peterson

Is a Green Economy the Key to Job Growth? Employment Trends and Opportunities for ESL Learners

Illuminating Light Bulbs

FIRE EXTINGUISHER TRAINING

Lesson 6. BioMara gratefully acknowledges the following funders: Content Section - How Algae can be used to produce Biofuel.

COST OF GREENHOUSE GAS MITIGATION [21jun, 10jul 1pm]

Fossil Energy Study Guide: Oil

GREENHOUSE EFFECT & GLOBAL WARMING - The internet as the primary source of information

Solar Flux and Flux Density. Lecture 3: Global Energy Cycle. Solar Energy Incident On the Earth. Solar Flux Density Reaching Earth

Section 1 The Earth System

CHAPTER 2 Energy and Earth

Activity 1: 2 butter cartons, scissors, cling film, thermometer, water, a sunny spot and a shady spot.

Rainforest Concern Module 2 Why do we need rainforests?

Facts on CO 2 Capture and Storage

HOW AN ENERGY EFFICIENT HOME CAN HELP THE ENVIRONMENT

Get Ready For The One Tonne Action Challenge!

Generating Current Electricity: Complete the following summary table for each way that electrical energy is generated. Pros:

AP* Environmental Science: Atmosphere and Air Pollution Answer Section

Mixtures. reflect. How is seawater different from pure water? How is it different from rocky soil?

Materials Needed: Choose one of the following methods depending on how familiar your students are with the internet and how to use it.

reflect look out! organisms: living things

SUPPLEMENTARY TOPIC 3 ENERGY AND CHEMICAL REACTIONS

8.2 Cells and Energy. What is photosynthesis? Photosynthesis takes place in the chloroplasts. CHAPTER 8. Solar cells and chloroplasts

Conserve Insight Energy Use Monitor. User Guide

Heat and Temperature: Front End Evaluation Report. Joshua Gutwill. October 1999

The Earth, Sun, and Moon

Calculating Greenhouse Gas Emissions

The solution to the climate crisis: a just transition to 100% renewable energy for all by 2050

Natural Gas: A Cleaner Energy Solution or Just Another Fossil Fuel?

CHAPTER 3 Heat and energy in the atmosphere

Chapter 18 Temperature, Heat, and the First Law of Thermodynamics. Problems: 8, 11, 13, 17, 21, 27, 29, 37, 39, 41, 47, 51, 57

Greenhouse Effect: Measuring Temperature Inside and Outside a Greenhouse (Teacher s Guide)

Chapter 4. Chemical Energy

Chapter 7: Greenhouse gases and particulate matter

PHOTOSYNTHESIS. reflect. what do you think?

Choosing better, more energy efficient windows. A homeowners guide

country in alarming numbers? Scare tactics make for a great hook here! The Intergovernmental

Conserve Valet Smart USB Charging Station. User Guide

The Earth's Atmosphere. Layers of the Earth's Atmosphere

Climate Control and Ozone Depletion. Chapter 19

Teacher s Guide For. Glaciers and Ice Caps The Melting

Conserve Socket Power Timer. User Guide

PHYSICAL WORLD. Heat & Energy GOD S DESIGN. 4th Edition Debbie & Richard Lawrence

22.1 Nuclear Reactions

Class A - Wood, paper, cloth, trash, plastics Solid combustible materials that are not metals. (Class A fires generally leave an Ash.

CO 2 and the Greenhouse Effect Elementary and Introductory Lessons and Labs

Unit 5 Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration

Science Tutorial TEK 6.9C: Energy Forms & Conversions

Transcription:

What is global warming? Global Warming and Greenhouse Gases Imagine you live in a timber shack in Alaska. It's chilly up there, so you build yourself a huge log fire and pile on all the wood you can find. To start with, the fire seems a great idea especially since it's so cold outside. The shack warms up slowly, but predictably, and it's soon pretty cosy. Since the shack is much warmer than the atmosphere and ground that surround it, it loses heat quite quickly. If the fire supplies heat at the same rate as the shack loses it, the shack stays at roughly the same temperature. But if you make the fire too big, the shack will get hotter... and hotter... and hotter. Before long, you'll start feeling uncomfortable. You might wish you'd never made the fire so big in the first place. But once it's burning, there's nothing you can do to stop it. The shack will keep getting hotter long after you stop piling wood on the fire. Global warming is working a bit like this. Thanks to a variety of things that people do, Earth is getting slightly warmer year by year. It's not really warming up noticeably at least not in the short term. In fact, since 1900, the whole planet has warmed up only by around 0.8 degrees Celsius. By the end of the 21st century, however, global warming is likely to cause an increase in Earth's temperature of around 2 5 degrees Celsius. There is a 75 percent chance of a 2 3 degree warming and a 50 percent chance of a 5 degree warming, and scientists agree that the warming is most likely to be around 3 degrees. Now even a 5-degree warming might not sound like much to worry about, but 5 degrees is roughly how much difference there is between the world as it is today and as it was during the last Ice Age. In other words, when we came out of the Ice Age, the planet warmed by 5 degrees over about 5000 years. Modern climate change threatens to produce the same amount of a warming in as little as a century! Once something as big as a planet starts to warm up, it's very hard to slow down the process and almost impossible to stop it completely. Global warming means Big Trouble. What causes global warming? Global warming is caused by a phenomenon known as the greenhouse effect. A greenhouse (or glasshouse) is good for growing things because it traps heat inside and stays hotter than the atmosphere around it. The natural greenhouse effect Earth's atmosphere behaves like a gigantic greenhouse, though it traps heat a different way. Gases high in the atmosphere, such as carbon dioxide and methane, behave like a giant piece of curved glass wrapped right round the planet. The Sun's rays (mostly visible light and short-wavelength, high-energy ultraviolet radiation) pass straight through this greenhouse gas and warm up Earth. The warming planet gives off heat energy (longer wavelength infrared radiation), which radiates out toward space. Some of this outgoing radiation does not pass

through the atmosphere, but is reflected back down to Earth, effectively trapping heat and keeping the planet about 33 degrees hotter than it would otherwise be. This is called the natural greenhouse effect and it's a good thing. Without it, Earth would be much too cold to support the huge diversity of life that it does. The enhanced greenhouse effect The greenhouse effect would be nothing to worry about were it not for one important thing. Since the Industrial Revolution in the 18th and 19th centuries (when coal-burning steam engines were first used on a large scale), humans have been using energy in far greater quantities. Car engines, for example, which were invented in the mid-19th century, work by burning gasoline (petrol) with oxygen from the air to make heat in a chemical reaction called combustion. As a byproduct, combustion gives off (or "emits") invisible carbon dioxide gas (the gas our bodies breathe out). In a similar way, power plants use combustion to make our electricity by burning fuels like coal, gas, and oil so they give off carbon dioxide too. Most of the energy people use is made by burning these so-called fossil fuels producing huge clouds of carbon dioxide, which are known as carbon dioxide emissions. The carbon dioxide drifts up into the atmosphere and makes Earth's greenhouse gas just a little thicker. This is called the enhanced greenhouse effect. As a result, more of the Sun's heat gets trapped inside the atmosphere and the planet warms up. To summarize: burning fossil fuels give off carbon dioxide, which increases the greenhouse effect and heats the planet the process we call global warming. This is often described as an anthropogenic process, which simply means "humans caused it." Although a small minority of people dispute this, the overwhelming majority of the world's climate scientists believe that global warming is "very likely" caused by human greenhouse gas emissions.

Name: Period: Global Warming Guided Imagine you live in a timber shack in. It's chilly up there, so you build yourself a huge and pile on all the you can find. To start with, the fire seems a great idea especially since it's so cold outside. The shack warms up, but predictably, and it's soon pretty cosy. Since the shack is much than the atmosphere and ground that surround it, it loses quite quickly. If the fire supplies heat at the same as the shack loses it, the shack stays at roughly the same. But if you make the fire too, the shack will get hotter... and hotter... and hotter. Before long, you'll start feeling. You might wish you'd never made the fire so. But once it's burning, there's to stop it. The shack will keep getting hotter long after you stop piling wood on the fire. is working a bit like this. Thanks to a variety of things that people do, Earth is getting slightly year by year. It's not really warming up at least not in the. In fact, since 1900, the whole planet has warmed up only by. By the end of the, however, global warming is likely to cause an increase in Earth's temperature of around Celsius. There is a 75 percent chance of a 2 3 degree warming and a 50 percent chance of a 5 degree warming, and scientists agree that the is most likely to be around. Now even a 5-degree warming might not sound like much to worry about, but 5 degrees is roughly how much difference there is between the world as it is today and as it was during the last. In other words, when we came out of the Ice Age, the planet warmed by over about years. Modern climate change threatens to produce the same amount of in as little as a! Once something as big as a planet starts to warm up, it's very hard to slow down the process and almost to stop it completely. Global warming means Big Trouble. What causes global warming?

Global warming is caused by a phenomenon known as the. A greenhouse (or glasshouse) is good for because it traps inside and stays around it. The natural greenhouse effect Earth's atmosphere behaves like a gigantic greenhouse, though it traps heat a different way. Gases high in the atmosphere, such as and, behave like a giant piece of wrapped right round the planet. The Sun's rays (mostly visible light and short-wavelength, high-energy ) pass straight through this greenhouse gas and warm up Earth. The warming planet gives off (longer wavelength infrared radiation), which radiates out toward space. Some of this outgoing radiation does not pass through the atmosphere, but is reflected back down to Earth, effectively and keeping the planet about 33 degrees hotter than it would otherwise be. This is called the and it's a good thing. Without it, Earth would be much too cold to support the huge diversity of life that it does. The enhanced greenhouse effect The greenhouse effect would be nothing to worry about were it not for one important thing. Since the in the 18th and 19th centuries (when coalburning were first used on a large scale), humans have been using in far greater quantities., for example, which were invented in the mid-19th century, work by burning gasoline with oxygen from the air to make heat in a chemical reaction called. As a byproduct, combustion gives off invisible (the gas our bodies breathe out). In a similar way, use combustion to make our by burning fuels like coal, gas, and oil so they give off carbon dioxide too. Most of the energy people use is made by burning these so-called producing huge clouds of carbon dioxide, which are known as. The carbon dioxide drifts up into the atmosphere and makes Earth's greenhouse gas just a little thicker. This is called the. As a result, more of the Sun's heat gets trapped inside the atmosphere and the planet warms up. To summarize: burning fossil fuels give off carbon dioxide, which increases the greenhouse effect and heats the planet the process we call global warming. This is often described as an process, which simply means "humans caused it." Although a small minority of people dispute this, the overwhelming majority of the world's climate scientists believe that global warming is "very likely" caused by greenhouse gas emissions.