A Runaway Greenhouse
Effect?
The Earth and Venus are near each other in the Solar System, and are similar in
size, density, and composition. Based on our understanding of the origin of
the Solar System, we would expect that their initial atmospheres would have
been rather similar. Yet the present atmospheres of the two planets could
hardly be much more different than they are. How did this come to be? The
reason is thought to lie in what is termed the "Runaway Greenhouse Effect".
Radiation Trapping by Greenhouse Gases
Sunlight falling on the surface of a planet is primarily in the visible part of
the spectrum. However, the reflection of light from the surface tends to
produce light of longer wavelength called infrared (IR) radiation (also known
as radiant heat; IR radiation is the heat that we sense being radiated from a
hot surface like a hot piece of metal).
Now, because of their molecular structures,
certain gases like carbon dioxide and water vapor (and many others)
have the property
that they are essentially transparent
to visible light but absorb IR radiation very strongly. Such compounds are
sometimes termed greenhouse gases because, if they are present in a
planetary atmosphere, they absorb the scattered IR radiation and
tend to raise the temperature of the atmosphere by trapping solar energy.
(The analogy with a real
greenhouse is imperfect because the mechanism by which a
greenhouse stays warm is different, but it is sufficiently good that the name
"(Planetary) Greenhouse Effect" is now the common one for this phenomenon.)
The Greenhouse Effect Out of Control
The greenhouse effect occurs for all planetary atmospheres containing
greenhouse gases, and is responsible
for their being warmer than would be the case otherwise. The greenhouse effect
by itself could not account for the conditions that we find
on Venus. However, under
certain conditions we believe the greenhouse effect can "run away". For
example, consider the case of a planet like the Earth. The Earth has enormous
amounts of two greenhouse gases: water vapor and carbon dioxide. However, for
the Earth most of the water and carbon dioxide are not in the atmosphere. The
water is mostly in the oceans, and the carbon dioxide is mostly bound
chemically in rocks made from compounds that chemists call carbonates
(for example, limestone).
Now suppose we increased the effectiveness of greenhouse heating of the Earth's
atmosphere, for example by increasing the amount of solar radiation falling on
it, or by increasing the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere
(for example, by burning fossil fuels, which produce water vapor and carbon
dioxide as byproducts of burning). We would then expect the temperature to
rise in the atmosphere (assuming no other effects intervened---a big "if" in the
realistic case since the atmosphere is complicated). This would be a
greenhouse effect.
. . . and the Oceans Would Boil
It would become a runaway greenhouse effect if the
rising temperature approached
the boiling point of water, because then the oceans
would begin to convert
to water vapor, the water vapor would increase the effectiveness of
heat trapping and accelerate the greenhouse effect, this would cause the
temperature to rise further, thus causing the oceans to evaporate faster, etc.,
etc. (This type of runaway is also called a "positive feedback loop".)
When the oceans were gone the
atmosphere would finally stabilize at a much higher temperature and
at much higher density, because all the water would now be in the atmosphere.
. . . and the Rocks Would Sublimate
We can envision even a further runaway stage in this scenario. Suppose the
preceding runaway raised the temperature so high that chemical reactions begin
to occur that drive the carbon dioxide from the rocks into the atmosphere
(the process is called sublimation; a
few hundred degrees Celsius would be sufficient). Then another runaway would
occur as the carbon dioxide feeding into the atmosphere would accelerate the
heating, which would in turn accelerate the transfer of carbon dioxide from the
rocks to the atmosphere.
The Mother of All Environmental Disasters
The atmosphere would finally stablilize at a still higher temperature and
pressure after all the carbon dioxide had been
driven from the rocks. In fact, we
believe that if this sequence were to take place on the Earth, the resulting
temperature and pressure of the atmosphere left behind would not be very
different from that for present-day Venus: the atmospheric termperature would
be hundreds of degrees Celsius and the pressure would be maybe 100 times
greater than it is today.
Thus, we believe that in the case of Venus the initial solar heating kept
oceans from forming, or kept them from
staying around if they did form, and the subsequent
lack of rainfall and failure of plant life to evolve kept the carbon dioxide
in the atmosphere rather than binding it in the rocks as is the case for the
Earth; thus, Venus has
an environmental disaster for an atmosphere.
The sobering
warning for us is obvious: we have to be extremely concerned about processes
such as burning of fossil fuels in large volumes that might (we don't know for
sure because the scientific questions are complex)
have the potential to trigger a runaway greenhouse effect and produce on
the
Earth atmospheric conditions such as those found on Venus.
Runaway Greenhouse Effect
(Shockwave)
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