Radiation-0.mp3
Radiation-0.mp4
Radiation-I.mp3
Radiation-I.mp4
Radiation-intro.mp3
[Intro]
(Holler:)
“Solar!”
(☢️ Radiation)
Say it again
(☢️ Radiation)
[Bridge]
Shine
(Shine on our time)
[Verse 1]
Travelin’ through space
Toward the human race
Where they increase the pace
Of disgrace
[Chorus]
(Radiation)
Red alert
(Radiation)
Gonna get hurt
It’s our time to shine
[Bridge]
(Shine)
Shine on our time
(Shine)
Shine the light on insight
(Shine on our time)
[Verse 2]
Once it gets past
Trapped in our gas
Changing things fast
(Holler solar!)
… but alass
[Chorus]
(Radiation)
Red alert
(Radiation)
Gonna get hurt
It’s our time to shine
(Shine)
[Outro]
Shine on our time
(Shine)
Shine the light on insight
A SCIENCE NOTE: Earth’s climate system and energy transfer
1. Solar Radiation: How Energy Reaches Earth
Incoming Energy
-
The Sun emits electromagnetic radiation, mostly in visible light, UV, and near-infrared.
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This radiation travels through space and reaches Earth — about 1,361 W/m² at the top of the atmosphere (called the solar constant).
2. How That Energy Is Distributed
In the Atmosphere:
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About 30% of solar energy is reflected back to space by clouds, aerosols, and Earth’s surface (called albedo).
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About 20% is absorbed by the atmosphere, mostly by water vapor, ozone, and dust.
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Some is scattered — especially shorter wavelengths (why the sky is blue).
On the Land:
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Land surfaces absorb solar radiation and convert it into heat (thermal energy).
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That energy is:
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Re-radiated as infrared (longwave) radiation
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Used in evaporation (latent heat transfer)
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Conducted downward into soil or transferred to the air above
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In the Oceans:
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Water absorbs sunlight, especially in the upper few meters.
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Oceans store huge amounts of thermal energy due to water’s high heat capacity.
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Ocean currents (like the Gulf Stream) redistribute heat globally.
3. Earth’s Energy Balance
To stay stable, Earth must re-radiate as much energy as it receives. This happens through:
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Infrared radiation emitted back into space
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Regulated by greenhouse gases like CO₂, CH₄, and water vapor, which trap some outgoing heat — keeping Earth habitable
This is called the greenhouse effect — natural and necessary, but…
4. How Human Activity Is Disrupting the Process
A. Enhanced Greenhouse Effect
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Burning fossil fuels adds extra CO₂, CH₄, and N₂O — increasing the greenhouse gas layer.
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This traps more heat and reduces the energy Earth sends back into space.
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Result: global warming — land, oceans, and atmosphere all heat up.
B. Land Use Changes
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Deforestation reduces the Earth’s albedo (dark forests absorb more than bright grass or snow) and limits carbon capture.
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Urbanization adds heat-absorbing surfaces (asphalt, concrete), creating heat islands.
C. Aerosols and Air Pollution
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Some aerosols reflect sunlight, causing temporary cooling.
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Others, like black carbon (soot), absorb heat and settle on ice, accelerating melting and lowering albedo.
D. Ocean Disruption
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Warmer water expands, raises sea levels, and disrupts currents (like the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation).
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Melting polar ice reduces reflection and increases absorption.
Summary Table
| Region | Natural Energy Transfer | Human Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Atmosphere | Absorbs, reflects, re-radiates | More GHGs trap more heat (warming) |
| Land | Absorbs sunlight, re-radiates | Deforestation, urban heat islands |
| Oceans | Absorbs & stores heat, moves it | Warming, acidification, current disruption |
Bonus: Climate Feedback Loops
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Melting ice → lower albedo → more absorption → more warming
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Warming oceans → less CO₂ absorption → more GHGs in the air
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Thawing permafrost → releases methane → even more warming