The Main Greenhouse Gases
- The main greenhouse gases have both natural and human-generated origins
- In order of decreasing contributions, these are:
- Water vapour (H2O) - evaporation from the oceans / seas and plants
- Carbon dioxide (CO2) - volcanic eruptions, wildfires and respiration
- Methane (CH4) - emission from oceans and soils as part of decomposition, termites also emit methane
- Nitrous oxide (N2O) - soils and oceans
- When radiation from the Sun hits the Earth, it is radiated back from the Earth's surface as long-wave radiation
- A greenhouse gas is a gas that absorbs this re-radiated radiation, trapping it in the Earth's atmosphere so that it is not lost to space
- Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere have a similar effect to the glass in a greenhouse, hence the term greenhouse gas
- There are many greenhouse gases, and those that contribute most to the greenhouse effect are:
- Carbon dioxide (CO2)
- Water vapour (H2O)
- These have the most significant impact on the greenhouse effect
- There are other greenhouse gases which have a lesser effect, such as:
- Ozone (O2 and O3)
- Methane
- Nitrous oxides
Examiner Tip
You may have heard of a separate environmental concern, described as the 'hole in the ozone layer'; this is not something that you need to know about. Ozone is an atmospheric gas that absorbs harmful UV radiation before it reaches earth, but any concerns about ozone depletion have nothing to do with the greenhouse effect. The problem of ozone depletion is one that has improved significantly due to measures taken to reduce certain types of emissions; humans can get it right sometimes!
You do not need to know the specific sources of each type of greenhouse gas – all you need to know is that each greenhouse gas has both natural and man-made origins