Greenhouse Effect
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Greenhouse Effect
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The heating effect exerted by the atmosphere upon the earth by virtue of
the fact that the atmosphere (mainly, its water vapor) absorbs and remits infrared
radiation. In detail: the shorter wavelengths of insolation
are transmitted rather freely through the atmosphere to be absorbed at the
earth's surface. The earth then reemits this as long-wave (infrared) terrestrial
radiation, a portion of which is absorbed by the atmosphere and again
emitted (see atmospheric
radiation). Some of this is emitted downward back to the earth's surface (
counter-radiation).
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The mean surface temperature for the entire world, 14 degrees C, is
almost 40 degrees C higher than the mean temperature required for radiative
equilibrium of a black body at the earth's mean distance from the sun. It is
essential, in understanding the concept of the greenhouse effect, to note that
the important additional warming is due to the counterradiation from the
atmosphere. The glass panes of a greenhouse function in this manner, hence the
name.
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References
This article is based on NASA's Dictionary of Technical Terms for Aerospace Use