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Climate Questions: How does carbon dioxide trap heat?

greenhouse gas
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That carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases trap heat is something scientists have known about for more than a 150 years. The underlying concept behind climate change is simple enough that school children can replicate the chemistry and physics and so can you.

The why and how it happens is only a bit more complicated.

Just as a traps heat or , dioxide, methane and other gases—nicknamed gases—trap heat from the sun that would otherwise bounce back into space. The blanket or greenhouse aren't perfect analogies but they give the right sense of what is happening, said University of Pennsylvania climate scientist Michael Mann.

Without the , scientists said. The , which is natural but then put on steroids by , is responsible for conditions that make life on Earth possible.

But there can be too much of a good thing. Scientists point to the on Venus as a case example. In fact, former top NASA climate scientist James Hansen, often called the Godfather of global warming, initially was studying what was happening on Venus before he turned to his home planet and accurately warned people about a smaller scale version happening here.

Heat from the sun comes through the atmosphere and , a different wavelength than it came in on. If you put your hand over a dark rock on a warm sunny day you may be able to feel that heat heading off Earth. The greenhouse effect is when that heat tries to escape Earth, but some of it is trapped by different chemicals in the atmosphere, such as , carbon dioxide and methane.

In the 1820s, French mathematician and scientist that something keeps Earth warmer than a bare rock out in space: Our atmosphere.

"Our atmosphere, thrown as a barrier across the terrestrial rays, produces a local heightening of the temperature at the Earth's surface," Irish physicist identifying water vapor and carbon dioxide as natural greenhouse gases trapping heat. Then in took it one step further and calculated that changes in carbon dioxide may affect the climate.

Many and even home kitchen can show this with two plastic soda bottles, some carbon dioxide, air, a strong light bulb or flame and a thermometer. Heat up a bottle with regular air and one filled with carbon dioxide in similar ways, take their temperatures and after a while the carbon dioxide filled one should warm noticeably more.

That's because of the geometry, spin and vibration of carbon molecules block the specific infrared wavelength of light that's trying to escape Earth, Mann said. It's a different wavelength than the light heading into the sun.

Greenhouse gases, especially carbon dioxide, "correspond to sort of holes" in the light spectrum that would otherwise allow heat to escape, but they block the exits, Mann said.

But if there are natural why do small changes in carbon levels matter?

Earth's levels are about 420 parts per million, compared to 280 before the industrial revolution and the Earth has warmed about in that time. Mann suggests another home experiment. Take a clear bowl of water. Put a few drops, say 0.4% of the water, of black ink in it.

"And the water turns black now," Mann said. "Certain chemicals can have a very potent impact in very low concentrations. It's true of cyanide. That's why we avoid cyanide in even lower concentrations than that. And the ink experiment really drives how much of an influence a small number of very potent molecules can have... And that's what's going on here."

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