Homework hint: All problems in the text have answers at the back of the book! Some problems require just a written response, while others ask you to calculate something. Please write up all answers clearly, completely, and as succinctly as possible. You can work with others, but your final answers must be written up on your own.
Question 2. Study Fig. 5.4 on page 160 until you
understand it well.
a) Work out the mass of all of the gases in
the figure in atomic mass units (so that H2 gas has a mass
of about 2). Based on your answer, do you expect the Water Vapor,
Ammonia, and Methane curves to be identical or slightly
separated?
b) Work out the mass in atomic mass units of Argon
(Ar), Neon (Ne), and Carbon Monoxide (CO). Where would these curves
lie on Fig. 5.4?
c) Pluto's orbit is eccentric so that it moves
back and forth horizontally on Fig. 5.4 over its 250 year orbital
period. Which gases (including your answers to b) would you expect to
Pluto to be able to retain in its atmosphere based on Fig. 5.4?
d) Pluto's atmosphere is known to be composed of 99% Nitrogen with
smaller amounts of Carbon Monoxide and Methane. There is no Water
Vapor or Carbon Dioxide detected in the atmosphere. Can you figure out
why?
e) Chemistry amongst the known gases in Pluto's atmosphere
should produce HCN which is expected to have an effect Pluto's
upper atmosphere that is not included in Fig. 5.4. Describe how HCN
might change Pluto's position on Fig. 5.4 and how that might affect your
answer to part d).
Question 3. Solar heating drives Hadley cell
circulation on Earth and on other planets. This circulation pattern
leads to prevailing easterly or westerly winds. Read page 190
(especially box 5.7) carefully to see how this works.
a) As an air
parcel at the top of a Hadley cell moves north from the equator on
Earth, high altitude winds move more quickly to the East (relative to
Earth's surface) for two reasons. State them. Which is more important?
b) Repeat the calculation for a near-surface air parcel moving
from 30 degrees to 60 degrees North latitude. Start by assuming that
the air is motionless with respect to the Earth's surface at 30
degrees latitude. These are the Westerly trade winds - how fast do you
predict them to be? Are they faster or slower than the calculation
done in the book for the zero to 30 degree Hadley cell?
c)
Convert your answer to a more familiar unit: miles per hour. Does the
answer surprise you? Discuss factors that will slow these
speeds. Based on your experience, do you think that these factors are
fairly weak or fairly strong?
Question 5. a) Look at question 6.4 in the text and
its answer in the back of the book. Repeat this calculation for Earth:
work out how much heat flux (in Watts) is produced by Earth's entire
surface and then how much heat is produced by a square meter of
surface. Compare your answer to the average amount of the Sun's energy
received by a square meter of Earth's surface, 342 W/m2, and
form a ratio as in question 6.4. Which energy source primarily
determines Earth's surface temperature?
b) The strength of solar
heating decreases with the inverse square of distance (the same amount
of energy from the Sun is divided up into ever larger spherical
shells). How much farther would the Earth have to be from the Sun for
the solar heating rate to equal the heat from radioactive decay?
c) From your answer in b), speculate on which objects in the solar
system might have their surface temperatures determined by radioactive
decay rather than by the intensity of intercepted sunlight.