Correcting a fundamental mistake in radiation physics shows how the
middle atmosphere plays the primary role in determining how effectively
earth is heated by sun
Abstract
The thermal and chemical structure of the middle atmosphere is
determined by molecules of air absorbing high-energy, solar, ultraviolet
radiation. The dominant photochemical reaction for forming the
stratosphere is dissociation of a molecule of oxygen into two atoms of
oxygen. When a molecule is dissociated, the two pieces fly apart at high
velocity. Temperature of air is directly proportional to the average
velocity of all its molecules and atoms squared. Thus, photochemical
dissociation converts bond energy efficiently and completely into air
temperature. A molecule of oxygen is dissociated by absorbing
ultraviolet-C radiation with frequencies around 1237 terahertz, energies
around 5.1 electronvolts. Since oxygen makes up 20.95% of Earth’s
atmosphere, there is ample oxygen to absorb all solar ultraviolet-C of
appropriate frequencies that reaches the stratosphere, keeping the
stratopause 30 to 40 oC warmer than the tropopause. Thus, the
stratosphere forms an “electric” blanket warming Earth—electric in
the sense that the thermal energy comes from a distant source, Sun, not
from the body under the blanket, Earth. The second most important
photochemical reaction in the stratosphere is dissociation of ozone by
ultraviolet-B radiation with frequencies around 967 terahertz, energies
around 4.0 electronvolts. While ozone concentrations, even in the ozone
layer, are less than 10 parts per million, ozone is continually being
formed and dissociated in the endless ozone-oxygen cycle, absorbing most
solar ultraviolet-B radiation. When atoms of chlorine reach the lower
stratosphere especially in winter, ozone concentrations that normally
increase in winter can be depleted. One atom of chlorine, under the
right conditions, can destroy 100,000 molecules of ozone. Depletion of
the ozone layer allows more ultraviolet-B radiation than normal to reach
Earth. Ultraviolet-B radiation is observed to cause sunburn, cataracts,
skin cancer and mutations. It also dissociates ground-level ozone
pollution, warming air in populated regions and penetrates oceans more
than one hundred meters, very efficiently increasing ocean heat content
as observed. Because of the ozone-oxygen cycle, where there are
increased concentrations of ozone in the atmosphere, there is increased
temperature. Sudden stratospheric warmings of 30-40 oC within days are
typically associated with high concentrations of ozone and occur most
frequently at altitudes of 30-50 km where dissociation of oxygen and
ozone are most efficient. In 1798, Sir Benjamin Thompson proposed the
mechanical theory of heat generated by friction when boring canon. This
mechanical theory evolved into two fundamental assumptions: 1) heat is a
flux of thermal energy measured in watts per square meter and 2) the
greater the amount of flux absorbed, the hotter the body will become.
Note that this approach never addresses the issue of what heat or
thermal energy are, physically. (Complete abstract in poster file.)