Solar Radiation, Heat Balance and Temperature
"The Earth receives energy from the Sun, keeps what it needs, and sends the rest back to space."
1. Chapter Overview
The SUN powers nearly everything on Earth — winds, ocean currents, the water cycle, life itself. This chapter explains: INSOLATION (incoming solar radiation), the Earth's HEAT BUDGET (how it BALANCES incoming and outgoing radiation), the GREENHOUSE EFFECT (what keeps Earth warm), and the factors controlling the distribution of TEMPERATURE across the planet's surface.
2. Insolation (Incoming Solar Radiation)
What Is It?
- The solar energy received by the Earth
- Measured in watts per square metre
- The Earth intercepts only 1/2000th of the Sun's total output — but that's enough to power EVERYTHING
Factors Affecting Insolation
| Factor | Effect |
|---|---|
| Angle of the Sun | Higher angle (overhead) = more energy per unit area. Lower angle (oblique) = same energy SPREAD over larger area = less heating. |
| Length of day | Longer day = more insolation received. Poles: 24-hour sun in summer, zero in winter. |
| Atmospheric transparency | Clouds, dust, pollution REFLECT and ABSORB solar radiation → less reaches the surface |
| Distance from the Sun | Earth's orbit is slightly ELLIPTICAL. Perihelion (closest, ~Jan 3) = ~7% more; Aphelion (farthest, ~July 4). Small effect. |
3. What Happens to Insolation? — Reflection, Absorption, Scattering
Reflection (Albedo)
- Albedo: the FRACTION of incoming radiation that is REFLECTED
- Fresh snow: 70-90% (highest). Clouds: 20-70%. Forest: 5-15%. Water (low angle): ~50%. Ocean (overhead): 5%.
- Earth's average albedo: ~30% (about 30% of incoming solar radiation is reflected back — never 'used')
Absorption
- 70% of insolation is ABSORBED by the Earth (atmosphere + surface)
- This 70% HEATS the planet
Scattering
- Dust, gas molecules SCATTER light in all directions
- Blue sky: SHORTER wavelengths (blue) scatter MORE than longer (red)
- Red sunsets: light travels through MORE atmosphere at sunset → more scattering of blues → red and orange remain
4. The Heat Balance (Heat Budget)
If the Earth keeps absorbing energy, why doesn't it keep getting HOTTER?
- The Earth MUST lose as much energy as it gains — or its temperature would keep rising
- Energy IN (shortwave solar radiation): 100 units at top of atmosphere
- Energy OUT (longwave terrestrial radiation): 100 units back to space
- The Earth is in RADIATIVE BALANCE
The Rough Heat Budget
- Incoming: 100 units of shortwave solar radiation
- ~30 units reflected (albedo — clouds, surface, atmosphere)
- ~70 units absorbed (atmosphere 20%, earth surface 50%)
- Outgoing: 100 units of longwave terrestrial radiation
- Atmosphere ABSORBS much of the outgoing radiation (greenhouse gases)
- Re-radiates some back to surface (KEEPS EARTH WARM)
- Net: 100 units escape to space
5. The Greenhouse Effect — Natural and Anthropogenic
The Natural Greenhouse Effect — GOOD
- Earth's surface radiates heat as LONGWAVE (infrared) radiation
- Greenhouse gases (CO₂, H₂O, CH₄) in the atmosphere ABSORB this outgoing heat
- They re-radiate some back to the surface → Earth is WARMER than it would be
- WITHOUT the natural greenhouse effect: Earth's average temperature would be -18°C (now: ~15°C) — FROZEN
- The natural greenhouse effect makes Earth HABITABLE
The Enhanced (Anthropogenic) Greenhouse Effect — BAD
- Human activities (burning fossil fuels, deforestation) ADD more greenhouse gases
- → MORE heat trapped → GLOBAL WARMING → climate change
6. Temperature Distribution
Factors Controlling Temperature
| Factor | Effect |
|---|---|
| Latitude | Most important. Equator = hot (sun nearly overhead). Poles = cold (oblique rays). |
| Altitude | Temperature DECREASES with height (~6.5°C/km). Mountains are colder than lowlands at the same latitude. |
| Distance from the sea (Continentality) | Coastal areas: MODERATE temperatures (water heats/cools slowly). Inland: EXTREME (hot summers, cold winters). |
| Ocean currents | Warm currents (Gulf Stream) RAISE coastal temperatures. Cold currents (California, Peru) LOWER them. |
| Cloud cover | Day: clouds BLOCK sunlight → cooler. Night: clouds TRAP outgoing heat → warmer (clouds are like a BLANKET). |
| Aspect | South-facing slopes (N Hemisphere) receive MORE sun than north-facing. |
Horizontal Distribution — Isotherms
- Isotherm: line joining places of EQUAL TEMPERATURE
- In January: isotherms BEND poleward over oceans (warmer), equatorward over continents (colder)
- In July: the OPPOSITE pattern
7. Inversion of Temperature
- Normally: temperature DECREASES with altitude
- Temperature inversion: temperature INCREASES with height (reverse of normal)
- Occurs: clear, calm nights → ground cools RADIDLY → air near ground becomes coldER than air above
- Common in valleys and basins
- Effects: traps pollutants → SMOG (common in Delhi winters)
8. Exam Focus
- Factors affecting insolation (4 factors)
- Albedo — definition and values
- Heat budget — incoming = outgoing
- Natural greenhouse effect (good/makes Earth habitable) vs enhanced (bad/global warming)
- Factors controlling temperature distribution (6 factors)
- Inversion of temperature — what, when, effects
9. Conclusion
Solar energy drives the Earth system. The planet's heat balance keeps it from freezing or frying:
- INSOLATION: varies by latitude, season, time of day
- HEAT BUDGET: 100 units in ~100 units out; albedo returns 30, the rest is absorbed and re-radiated
- GREENHOUSE: natural = Earth habitable; enhanced = global warming
- TEMPERATURE: controlled by latitude, altitude, continentality, ocean currents, cloud cover, and aspect
The Sun pours energy onto Earth. The Earth balances its books — and life thrives in between.
