yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Hey Bill Nye, 'How Do Greenhouse Gases Trap Photons in Our Atmosphere'? #TuesdaysWithBill| Big Think


2m read
·Nov 4, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.

Hello Mr. Nye. Happy Tuesday. My name is Billy. I'm a big fan and I have a question about climate change. If the photons from the sun are trapped in our atmosphere by our greenhouse gases, then how come those same greenhouse gases don't block photons from the sun from ever entering our atmosphere? Is there some sort of weird cosmic one-way road sign? Thank you.

Billy.

Billy.

Billy.

You have chanced on like the most important idea right now in climate science. When you say photons from the sun come in through the atmosphere, that is absolutely true. And they go through out through the atmosphere, but not all of them get out at the same energy.

Now here's the strange thing about light and electromagnetism. Now bear in mind we are humans trying to understand nature and if we can't get our heads around this, it's our problem. But basically, if you do experiments on waves of light or electricity, electromagnetic waves, you will find waves. If you do experiments on photons of light or electromagnetism, you will find particles. You can either detect particles or waves.

So both of these ideas have helped us in physics understand nature. So here's what happens. Light from the sun comes in at wavelengths that our eyes detect very well. It hits the Earth and is reradiated; the energy is absorbed by the atoms of soil, of bridges, of the ocean, of ice and reradiated or sent back out again at a longer wavelength; it's a little longer.

And I don't know if you know this but you probably do, what we, you and I call heat is the same thing as light at a wavelength longer than we see with our eyes. There are a lot of animals that see these wavelengths, but that's not our issue. You've seen it with night vision goggles, those cool images.

So light from the sun passes through the atmosphere; hits the Earth; all these different materials and is reradiated at a longer wavelength that carbon dioxide, methane and some other gases hold in. The visible light at the faster wavelength goes through; the heat at the longer wavelength does not go through to a limited extent, to a significant extent.

And that's how the Earth is warm enough for us to live. And because we put so much extra greenhouse gas via various species in the atmosphere, the world is getting warmer faster than it's ever gotten before.

It's a great question, Billy. That is the essence of this. Passes through at one wavelength, starts to go back out at a longer wavelength that is held in by the greenhouse gases. This is the fundamental idea in climate science.

Carry on...

More Articles

View All
The Napkin Ring Problem
Hey, Vsauce! Michael here! If you core a sphere; that is, remove a cylinder from it, you’ll be left with a shape called a Napkin ring because, well, it looks like a napkin ring! It’s a bizarre shape because if two Napkin rings have the same height, well t…
Solar Eclipse 101 | National Geographic
[Narrator] A solar eclipse happens when a new moon moves between the Earth and the sun, blocking some or all of the sun’s rays from reaching the Earth. By cosmic chance, even though the sun is 400 times wider than the moon, it’s also 400 times farther awa…
What it’s like to watch a Total Solar Eclipse
It’s August 21st, 2017, the day of the total solar eclipse. I’m in Madras, Oregon. The skies are clear. My sky tracker, it’s meant to move the camera with the sky, so it compensates for the Earth’s rotation. That should help me keep the sun in shot as the…
Corn Flour Fireball
[Applause] I’m about to make a corn starch Fireball. Check it! [Music] Out, that is awesome! But it’s not just about making a giant Fireball; this is about real science. What’s going to happen when I put this butane torch on this teaspoon of corn flour? …
If We Colonize the Moon, This Company Wants to Ship Our Stuff | Short Film Showcase
[Music] All good ideas start as crazy ideas, and then at some point, they occur. Then they become, “Why haven’t we been doing that all along?” We are right now in that transition for changing the way people think about the Moon. The Apollo missions were l…
Common denominators: 3/5 and 7/2 | Math | 4th grade | Khan Academy
Rewrite each fraction with a denominator of 10. We have two fractions: 3 fifths and 7 halves, and we want to take their denominators of five and two and change them to be a common denominator of 10. Let’s start with 3 fifths. We can look at this visuall…