The Greenhouse Effect
Greenhouse gases like water vapour, carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide trap the infrared radiation released by the Earth's surface. The atmosphere acts like the glass in a greenhouse, allowing much of the shortwave solar radiation to travel through unimpeded, but trapping a lot of the longwave heat energy trying to escape back to space. This process makes the temperature rise in the atmosphere just as it does in the greenhouse. This is the Earth's natural greenhouse effect and keeps the Earth 33°C warmer than it would be without an atmosphere, at an average 15°C. In contrast, the moon, which has no atmosphere, has an average surface temperature of -18°C.
During the last 200 years mankind has been releasing extra quantities of greenhouse gases which are trapping more heat in the atmosphere. Over the same time period the climate of the Earth has warmed, and many scientists now accept that there is a direct link between the man-made enhancement of the greenhouse effect and global warming.
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