daisy world an introduction to systems and equilibria

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Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

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Page 1: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Daisy World

an introduction to systems and equilibria

Page 2: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Geological Example: Albedo Feedback

• high albedo: most energy is reflected back into space

• low albedo: most energy is absorbed and heats the surface

sunlightreceived

sunlightreflectedAlbedo

Page 3: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Some Albedo Values(from Table 2-1, Kump et al., 1999)

Sand: 0.20 – 0.30

Grass: 0.20 – 0.25

Forest: 0.05 – 0.10

Water (overhead sun): 0.03 – 0.05

Water (sun near horizon): 0.50 – 0.80

Fresh snow: 0.80 – 0.85

Thick cloud: 0.70 – 0.80

Page 4: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Image source: NASA Visible Earth, http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/view_detail.php?id=4701

Page 5: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Albedo Feedback cont.

Surface Temperature

SnowCoverage

Albedo

Page 6: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Albedo Feedback cont.

Surface Temperature

SnowCoverage

Albedo

Page 7: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

A variation of the Albedo Feedback

• how do plants respond to climate ?

Page 8: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria
Page 9: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria
Page 10: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

possible outcomes of feedback loops• Possible choices:

– Arrived at stable end state– Never settles down in a stable end state but

oscillates– Never reaches any stable end state

• What kind of feedback loops would produce these options?

Page 11: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Equilibrium States

• If system is in equilibrium it will not change unless it is disturbed

• two types: stable, unstable

Page 12: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Stable Equilibrium

• (within limits) system will return to old equilibrium state

Page 13: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Unstable Equilibrium

• small perturbations will dramatically affect the state of the system

Page 14: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria
Page 15: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

What kind of feedback loops tend to produce stable equilibria ?

Page 16: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Long-term temperature fluctuations

Page 17: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Daisy World

• Gaia hypothesis

• Earth a self-regulating system

• How can it do that without a brain

• Daisy World: local processes affect global state of climate

Page 18: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria
Page 19: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Influence of Daisy Growth on Surface Temperature

Daisy Coverage Avg. Surface Temp.

negative or positive feedback ?why ?

Page 20: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Daisy (Albedo) Feedback

Page 21: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Influence of Daisy Growth on Surface Temperature

Page 22: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Influence of Daisy Growth on Surface Temperature• two modes:

– below optimum temperature → positive feedback

– above optimum temperature → negative feedback

Page 23: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria
Page 24: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Two Feedback Mechanisms

Page 25: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Some Mathematical Conventions

• y = f(x) means that y is a function of an independent variable x

• mathematicians plot the independent variable on the abscissa (horizontal axis) and the dependent variable on the ordinate (vertical axis)

• physicists and other scientists are not always that rigid!

Page 26: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria
Page 27: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Two Feedback Mechanisms

Page 28: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

How to Solve for Both:

Page 29: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Two Equilibrium Points

• Both conditions have to be fulfilled

• Daisy coverage affects surface temperature

• Surface temperature affects daisy coverage

• under which conditions is the system in equilibrium?

Page 30: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

How Does the System Reach Equilibrium?

Page 31: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria
Page 32: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Are both Equilibria Created Equal?

• try out a few permutations yourself

• is the system always reaching an equilibrium?

Page 33: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Two Types of Equilibria

Page 34: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

External Forcing of the Daisy World System• Forcing: outside influence on the system

(e.g., insolation, chemical composition of the climate system etc.)

• How does Daisy World respond to external forcings ?

Page 35: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

How will Insolation changes affect the Daisy World ?

Page 36: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Effect of Luminosity on Temperature

Page 37: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria
Page 38: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria
Page 39: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

How does Feedback Affect new Equilibrium Temperature?

Temperature change withoutDaisy feedback ?(number of daisies is constant)

Temperature change withDaisy feedback ?(Daisies will spread)

Page 40: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

How to Quantify Importance of Feedback?

Temperature change withoutDaisy feedback ?(number of daisies is constant)

Temperature change withDaisy feedback ?(Daisies will spread)

Page 41: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

How to Quantify Importance of Feedback?

• compare ΔT0 and ΔTeq

• feedback factor:

0T

T

feedbackwithoutchangeetemperatur

feedbackwithchangeetemperaturf eq

Page 42: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

How will Stability of Equilibria be Affected?

Page 43: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Stability of Equilibrium Positions

Page 44: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Effects of Daisy Feedback

• biological albedo feedback

• positive and negative feedback loop

• two equilibrium positions (one stable, one unstable)

• resulting equilibrium is generally not optimum growth temperature for daisies

• presence of daisies lowers planetary temperatures

Page 45: Daisy World an introduction to systems and equilibria

Effects of Daisy Feedback (cont.)

• Dampens effects of external forcings

• feedback factor f quantifies feedback effect

• Stability of equilibria changes