Dependence of Earth's Thermal Radiation on Five Most Abundant Greenhouse Gases
W. A. van Wijngaarden, W. Happer

TL;DR
This paper evaluates how Earth's main greenhouse gases influence thermal radiation escape to space, highlighting the suppressed per-molecule forcing at current concentrations and the effects of doubling CO2, N2O, or CH4.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of greenhouse gas forcing dependence on concentration using extensive spectral data, without relying on traditional continuum models.
Findings
Per-molecule forcing is significantly suppressed at current concentrations.
Doubling CO2, N2O, or CH4 increases forcing by a few percent.
Satellite measurements agree well with the model predictions.
Abstract
The atmospheric temperatures and concentrations of Earth's five most important, greenhouse gases, HO, CO, O, NO and CH control the cloud-free, thermal radiative flux from the Earth to outer space. Over 1/3 million lines having strengths as low as cm of the HITRAN database were used to evaluate the dependence of the forcing on the gas concentrations. For a hypothetical, optically thin atmosphere, where there is negligible saturation of the absorption bands, or interference of one type of greenhouse gas with others, the per-molecule forcings are of order W for HO, CO, O, NO and CH. For current atmospheric concentrations, the per-molecule forcings of the abundant greenhouse gases HO and CO are suppressed by four orders of magnitude. The forcings of the less abundant greenhouse gases, O, NO and CH, are also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics · Atmospheric aerosols and clouds · Atmospheric chemistry and aerosols
