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The planet Venus is different from the earth in several respects. First, it is only 70% as far from the sun. Second, its thick clouds reflect 77%of all incident sunlight. Finally, its atmosphere is much more opaque to infrared light.

(a) Calculate the solar constant at the location of Venus, and estimate what the average surface temperature of Venus would be if it had no atmosphere and did not reflect any sunlight.

(b) Estimate the surface temperature again, taking the reflectivity of the clouds into account.

(c) The opaqueness of Venus's atmosphere at infrared wavelengths is roughly 70times that of earth's atmosphere. You can therefore model the atmosphere of Venus as 70successive "blankets" of the type considered in the text, with each blanket at a different equilibrium temperature. Use this model to estimate the surface temperature of Venus. (Hint: The temperature of the top layer is what you found in part (b). The next layer down is warmer by a factor of 21/4. The next layer down is warmer by a smaller factor. Keep working your way down until you see the pattern.)

Short Answer

Expert verified

(a) The solar constant at the location of Venus is2.8ร—103W/m2andthe average temperature of Venus if moon has no atmosphere is333K

(b) .

The surface temperature of Venus, when reflectivity is taking into account, is231K.

(c) .

The ground temperature of the Venus is670Kโˆฃ.

Step by step solution

01

Step 1. Given information

  • The amount of solar flux density per unit area is termed as solar constant. and it is given as

ฯƒsolar=P4ฯ€R2

  • From the Stefan's law of radiationwehavethatamount of heat radiation is as follows: H=ฯƒeฯ€r2T4

The above two equations will be used to get the desired result.

02

Step 2. Calculating the solar constant at the location of Venus .

Solar constant is given as :

ฯƒsolar=P4ฯ€R2

Here,Pis the solar power and data-custom-editor="chemistry" R{ is the mean distance between the sun and Venus. }

The mean distance between the sun and the Venus is 70%of the distance between the earth and the sun.

R=70%150ร—109m

=1.05ร—1011m

Putting 3.9ร—1026WforPand 1.05ร—1011mforRin the equationฯƒsolar=P4ฯ€R2

ฯƒsolar=3.9ร—1026W4ฯ€1.05ร—1011m2

=2.8ร—103W/m2

Hence, the solar constant at the location of Venus is2.8ร—103W/m2.

03

Step 3. Calculating  the average temperature of Venus if moon has no atmosphere.

The amount of heat absorbed by planet is

H=ฯƒsolarA

=ฯƒsolar4ฯ€r2

role="math" localid="1647760959262" where,ฯƒsolaris the solar constant andris the radius of the planet.

From the Stefan's law of radiation, the amount of heat radiation is as follows

H=ฯƒeฯ€r2T4
role="math" localid="1647761137436" ฯƒis the Stefan's constant andTis the absolute temperature.

Puttingฯƒsolar4ฯ€r2forH

ฯƒSolar4ฯ€r2=ฯƒeฯ€r2T4

T=ฯƒSolar4ฯƒ14

Putting , 2800w/m2for ฯƒSolarand5.6ร—10-8W/m2ยทK4forฯƒ.

T=2800W/m245.67ร—10-8W/m2ยทK414

T=333K

Hence, the average temperature of Venus if moon has no atmosphere is333K
04

Step 4. Calculating  the surface temperature of Venus , when the reflectivity is taking into account .

As the clouds reflect 77%incoming sunlight, then the remaining 23%will be absorbed Hence, the new solar constant will be

ฯƒsolar='(23%)ฯƒsolar

=(0.23)2.8ร—103W/m2

=644W/m2

The new surface temperature of the Venusis

T'=ฯƒSolar4ฯƒ]14

Putting the value of 644W/m2forฯƒsolar'and5.6ร—10-8W/m2ยทK4for ฯƒ.

T'=644W/m245.67ร—10-8W/m2ยทK414

=231K

Hence, the surface temperature of Venus, when reflectivity is taking into account, is231K.

05

Step 5. As we know that

The upper blanket send as much energy downward as it sends upward, so its total emission for each unit of sunlight is two units.

The equilibrium requires that it also absorb two units of infrared radiation and these two units must come from the lower blanket. Since the lower blanket is radiating twice as much as energy upward as the upper blanket, its temperature must be greater by a factor of 214.

In the same way, the lower blanket must also send as much energy down as it sends up - in this case, two units, since it emits a total of four units of which one comes from the upper blanket. The other three must come from the ground, as a check note that the ground is absorbed two units from the lower blanket and one from the sun so it must emit three units. In order for the ground to emit three times as much as energy upward as the upper blanket, its temperature must be greater by a factor of 314.

06

Step 6. Calculating  the ground temperature of Venus .

Hence, the 70thblanket is warmer than first blanket by the order of (70)1/4. So, the ground is warmer than the order of (71)1/4.The temperature of the Venusisgivenas

Tvenus=(71)14ยทT'Tvenus=(71)14(231K)=670K

Hence, the ground temperature of the Venus is670K

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Consideracollectionof10,000atomsofrubidium-87,confinedinsideaboxofvolume(10-5m)3.(a)Calculateฮต0,theenergyofthegroundstate.(Expressyouranswerinbothjoulesandelectron-volts.)(b) Calculate the condensation temperature, and comparekTctoฯต0. (c)SupposethatT=0.9Tc.Howmanyatomsareinthegroundstate?Howcloseisthechemicalpotentialtotheground-stateenergy?Howmanyatomsareineachofthe(threefold-degenerate)firstexcitedstates?(d)Repeatparts(b)and(c)forthecaseof106atoms,confinedtothesamevolume.Discusstheconditionsunderwhichthenumberofatomsinthegroundstatewillbemuchgreaterthanthenumberinthefirstexcitedstate.

It's not obvious from Figure 7.19 how the Planck spectrum changes as a function of temperature. To examine the temperature dependence, make a quantitative plot of the functionu(ฯต) for T = 3000 K and T = 6000 K (both on the same graph). Label the horizontal axis in electron-volts.

Consider any two internal states, s1 and s2, of an atom. Let s2 be the higher-energy state, so that Es2-Es1=ฯต for some positive constant. If the atom is currently in state s2, then there is a certain probability per unit time for it to spontaneously decay down to state s1, emitting a photon with energy e. This probability per unit time is called the Einstein A coefficient:

A = probability of spontaneous decay per unit time.

On the other hand, if the atom is currently in state s1 and we shine light on it with frequency f=ฯต/h, then there is a chance that it will absorb photon, jumping into state s2. The probability for this to occur is proportional not only to the amount of time elapsed but also to the intensity of the light, or more precisely, the energy density of the light per unit frequency, u(f). (This is the function which, when integrated over any frequency interval, gives the energy per unit volume within that frequency interval. For our atomic transition, all that matters is the value of u(f)atf=ฯต/h) The probability of absorbing a photon, per unit time per unit intensity, is called the Einstein B coefficient:

B=probability of absorption per unit timeu(f)

Finally, it is also possible for the atom to make a stimulated transition from s2down to s1, again with a probability that is proportional to the intensity of light at frequency f. (Stimulated emission is the fundamental mechanism of the laser: Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation.) Thus we define a third coefficient, B, that is analogous to B:

B'=probability of stimulated emission per unit timeu(f)

As Einstein showed in 1917, knowing any one of these three coefficients is as good as knowing them all.

(a) Imagine a collection of many of these atoms, such that N1 of them are in state s1 and N2 are in state s2. Write down a formula for dN1/dt in terms of A, B, B', N1, N2, and u(f).

(b) Einstein's trick is to imagine that these atoms are bathed in thermal radiation, so that u(f) is the Planck spectral function. At equilibrium, N1and N2 should be constant in time, with their ratio given by a simple Boltzmann factor. Show, then, that the coefficients must be related by

B'=BandAB=8ฯ€hf3c3

Consider a free Fermi gas in two dimensions, confined to a square area A=L2โ€ข

(a) Find the Fermi energy (in terms of Nand A), and show that the average energy of the particles is โˆˆF2.

(b) Derive a formula for the density of states. You should find that it is a constant, independent of โˆˆ.

(c) Explain how the chemical potential of this system should behave as a function of temperature, both when role="math" localid="1650186338941" kTโ‰ชโˆˆFand when Tis much higher.

(d) Because gโˆˆis a constant for this system, it is possible to carry out the integral 7.53 for the number of particles analytically. Do so, and solve for ฮผas a function of N. Show that the resulting formula has the expected qualitative behavior.

(e) Show that in the high-temperature limit, kTโ‰ซโˆˆF, the chemical potential of this system is the same as that of an ordinary ideal gas.

Although the integrals (7.53and 7.54) forNand Ucannot be

carried out analytically for all T, it's not difficult to evaluate them numerically

using a computer. This calculation has little relevance for electrons in metals (for

which the limit kT<<EFis always sufficient), but it is needed for liquid H3eand

for astrophysical systems like the electrons at the center of the sun.

(a) As a warm-up exercise, evaluate theNintegral (7.53) for the casekT=ฮตF

and ฮผ=0, and check that your answer is consistent with the graph shown

above. (Hint: As always when solving a problem on a computer, it's best to

first put everything in terms of dimensionless variables. So let t=kTฮตFrole="math" localid="1649996205331" ,c=ฮผฮตF

, and x=ฮตkT. Rewrite everything in terms of these variables,

and then put it on the computer.)

(b) The next step is to varyฮผ holdingT fixed, until the integral works out to

the desired value,N. Do this for values of kTฮตFranging from 0.1 up to 2,

and plot the results to reproduce Figure7.16. (It's probably not a good idea

to try to use numerical methods when kTฮตF is much smaller than 0.1, since

you can start getting overflow errors from exponentiating large numbers.

But this is the region where we've already solved the problem analytically.)

(c) Plug your calculated values ofยต into the energy integral (7.54), and evaluate

that integral numerically to obtain the energy as a function of temperature

forkTup to 2ฮตF Plot the results, and evaluate the slope to obtain the

heat capacity. Check that the heat capacity has the expected behavior at

both low and high temperatures.

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