The Earth's energy budget is in danger of being unbalanced by excess carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.
Normally carbon goes round closed cycles, and one example of a carbon cycle is the capture of carbon from carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by growing plants that can later be used as a energy source when the plant material is burned and recombined with oxygen to re-form carbon dioxide.
The danger is excessive use of carbon fuels that were formed millions of years ago because they have no short-term cycle that recaptures the excess carbon from the atmosphere. The carbon gases act to trap the Sun's heat in what is termed global warming.
The danger of excess carbon dioxide is seen in the planet Venus which has a thick atmosphere which is 93% carbon dioxide, and surface temperatures up to 500 degrees C.
It dose not care about Earth because it it too busy being the center of the solar system.
no
It's the amount of energy given out by the sun, and the energy received by the earth. Within that is the energy reflected and the energy given off from the earth.
Energy budget
Not sure what you mean with "10 percent of energy is transferred". The amount of energy on Earth will remain more or less constant, because energy incoming from the Sun will either be reflected immediately, or - if it is absorbed - most of it will heat up matter, which will make it radiate heat radiation (infrared radiation) faster, until eventually a balance is reached.
If by the 'ecosystem' you mean the surface of the earth and its atmosphere, which includes all living things on earth, then yes, the only way for energy to leave is by radiation out into space. The ecosystem receives heat from the sun and from the earth's hot interior, and radiates heat back into space, thus maintaining a thermal balance over time.
Gravitational potential energy is: m*g*h m=mass g=acceloration due to gravity h=height in relation to zero level/energy because earth's surface (with rare exception) is zero level/energy, meaning that you cant make things fall further than the surface of earth; the potential energy of an object changes based on how much distance you put between the surface and the object, yes.
no
no
It's the amount of energy given out by the sun, and the energy received by the earth. Within that is the energy reflected and the energy given off from the earth.
true
According to scientists, the balance between incoming solar energy and outgoing energy radiated into space is considered the earth energy budget.
According to scientists, the balance between incoming solar energy and outgoing energy radiated into space is considered the earth energy budget.
The balance between incoming and outgoing energy is called radiation balance.
Erkki Laitinen has written: 'Energy balance of the earth's surface in Finland' -- subject(s): Energy budget (Geophysics), Geophysics
According to scientists, the balance between incoming solar energy and outgoing energy radiated into space is considered the earth energy budget.
radiation
Nearly all of the energy that reaches Earth's surface comes from the sun.
It's the amount of energy given out by the sun, and the energy received by the earth. Within that is the energy reflected and the energy given off from the earth.