Variations in Solar Radiation
- The Earth's energy budget (EEB) establishes Earth's climate
- When the budget balances, temperatures on the Earth remain mostly constant
- However, the incoming and outgoing energy don’t balance
- The imbalance is partly caused by insolation, as it varies seasonally and with natural changes in the Earth's atmosphere
- Changes in the make-up of the atmosphere alter the amount of energy absorbed and reflected
- Changing factors such as greenhouse gases, water vapour etc., result in small, but significant energy imbalance on Earth
- Other factors include:
- Distance
- Seasonal change
- Latitude
- Reflectiveness (albedo)
Factors affecting global insolation
- Distance from the sun
- Earth's orbit around the Sun is elliptical
- Perihelion is when the Earth is closest to the Sun and insolation travels less distance
- Aphelion is when the Earth is furthest away from the Sun - insolation has to travel further
Elliptical orbit of Earth
- Latitudinal differences
- Insolation has to pass through more atmosphere in the polar latitudes
- Insolation is spread over a larger area in the polar regions
- The Sun is overhead at the Equator and tropical latitudes receive more insolation
Uneven distribution of insolation
- Seasonality and diurnal differences
- The Earth is permanently tilted in the same direction on its axis
- This tilt changes which hemisphere is facing the Sun as the Earth orbits throughout the year
- This creates the seasons and daylight availability
- Therefore, differences in the amounts of insolation gained or lost across the globe throughout the year
Seasonality affects global energy
Milankovitch cycles
- Milankovitch cycles describe the effects of changes in the Earth's movements on its climate over thousands of years
- In the 1920s, Milankovitch suggested that variations in eccentricity, tilt, and wobble of the Earth's orbit resulted in cyclic changes in the amount of solar radiation reaching the Earth
- Therefore, orbital changes influenced climatic patterns on Earth
Cycle | Time in Years (approx.) | Effect |
Eccentricity (shape) | 100,000 | The Earth's orbit is currently elliptical making it closer to the Sun in January than in July. This results in the seasons being more extreme in the Southern Hemisphere than in the Northern Hemisphere. This shape will move to become more circular and this leads to cooler, even seasons, as the distance from the Sun will be more equal |
Obliquity (tilt) | 40,000 | If the Earth’s axis were vertical, there would be no seasons – the same part of the Earth’s surface would be facing the Sun throughout the year. The more angled the axis, the more extreme the seasons are (hotter summers and colder winters) |
Precession (wobble) | 26,000 | The axis also traces a circle in space and every 26,000 years the Earth wobbles on its axis and this changes which star we see as the North Star – currently it is Polaris, but 13,000 years ago, it would have been Vega |
Milankovitch cycles
The shape, tilt and wobble of Earth's movement over thousands of years, affects long-term climate
Sunspots and solar flares
- Increased sunspot activity and solar flares are linked to higher average temperatures
- Sunspots are areas of intense and complicated magnetic fields that emit solar plasma flares thousands of kilometres above the sun
- The flare quickly rises to temperatures of 20 million °C
- These bursts of high-energy radiation have the same energy as a few million volcanic eruptions on the Earth
- Sunspots range from Earth-size 'pimples', to swollen scars halfway across the surface of the Sun
- The Sun goes through 11-year cycles of solar activity
The more 'spots' on the Sun's surface, the higher the Sun's output
Photo by The Adaptive on Unsplash
Cloud cover
- Clouds have higher albedos than the surface below, so more short-wave radiation is reflected back to space
- Cloud cover at the equator reflects insolation – more is reflected having a net cooling effect
- At the same time, clouds help contain the heat that would otherwise be emitted to space, through 'longwave warming,' which has a net warming effect
- High, thin clouds, such as cirrus, allow insolation to pass through but absorb some long-wave radiation, warming the Earth’s surface
- Deep convective clouds, especially cumulonimbus, neither heat nor cool overall
- An overcast sky with complete cloud cover of low thick clouds – stratus and stratocumulus, can reflect 80% of insolation and cool the Earth’s surface