
Radiative equilibrium is the condition where the total thermal radiation leaving an object is equal to the total thermal radiation entering it. It is one of the several requirements for thermodynamic equilibrium, but it can occur in the absence of thermodynamic equilibrium. There are various types of radiative equilibrium, which is itself a kind of dynamic equilibrium.
Definitions
Equilibrium, in general, is a state in which opposing forces are balanced, and hence a system does not change in time. Radiative equilibrium is the specific case of thermal equilibrium, for the case in which the exchange of heat is done by radiative heat transfer.
There are several types of radiative equilibrium.
Prevost's definitions
An important early contribution was made by Pierre Prevost in 1791. Prevost considered that what is nowadays called the photon gas or electromagnetic radiation was a fluid that he called "free heat". Prevost proposed that free radiant heat is a very rare fluid, rays of which, like light rays, pass through each other without detectable disturbance of their passage. Prevost's theory of exchanges stated that each body radiates to, and receives radiation from, other bodies. The radiation from each body is emitted regardless of the presence or absence of other bodies.
Prevost in 1791 offered the following definitions (translated):
Absolute equilibrium of free heat is the state of this fluid in a portion of space which receives as much of it as it lets escape.
Relative equilibrium of free heat is the state of this fluid in two portions of space which receive from each other equal quantities of heat, and which moreover are in absolute equilibrium, or experience precisely equal changes.
Prevost went on to comment that "The heat of several portions of space at the same temperature, and next to one another, is at the same time in the two species of equilibrium."
Pointwise radiative equilibrium
Following Max Planck (1914), a radiative field is often described in terms of specific radiative intensity, which is a function of each geometrical point in a space region, at an instant of time. This is slightly different from Prevost's mode of definition, which was for regions of space. It is also slightly conceptually different from Prevost's definition: Prevost thought in terms of bound and free heat while today we think in terms of heat in kinetic and other dynamic energy of molecules, that is to say heat in matter, and the thermal photon gas. A detailed definition is given by R. M. Goody and Y. L. Yung (1989). They think of the interconversion between thermal radiation and heat in matter. From the specific radiative intensity they derive , the monochromatic vector flux density of radiation at each point in a region of space, which is equal to the time averaged monochromatic Poynting vector at that point (D. Mihalas 1978 on pages 9–11). They define the monochromatic volume-specific rate of gain of heat by matter from radiation as the negative of the divergence of the monochromatic flux density vector; it is a scalar function of the position of the point:
.
They define (pointwise) monochromatic radiative equilibrium by
at every point of the region that is in radiative equilibrium.
They define (pointwise) radiative equilibrium by
at every point of the region that is in radiative equilibrium.
This means that, at every point of the region of space that is in (pointwise) radiative equilibrium, the total, for all frequencies of radiation, interconversion of energy between thermal radiation and energy content in matter is nil(zero). Pointwise radiative equilibrium is closely related to Prevost's absolute radiative equilibrium.
D. Mihalas and B. Weibel-Mihalas (1984) emphasise that this definition applies to a static medium, in which the matter is not moving. They also consider moving media.
Approximate pointwise radiative equilibrium
Karl Schwarzschild in 1906 considered a system in which convection and radiation both operated but radiation was so much more efficient than convection that convection could be, as an approximation, neglected, and radiation could be considered predominant. This applies when the temperature is very high, as for example in a star, but not in a planet's atmosphere.
Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar (1950, page 290) writes of a model of a stellar atmosphere in which "there are no mechanisms, other than radiation, for transporting heat within the atmosphere ... [and] there are no sources of heat in the surrounding" This is hardly different from Schwarzschild's 1906 approximate concept, but is more precisely stated.
Radiative exchange equilibrium
Planck (1914, page 40) refers to a condition of thermodynamic equilibrium, in which "any two bodies or elements of bodies selected at random exchange by radiation equal amounts of heat with each other."
The term radiative exchange equilibrium can also be used to refer to two specified regions of space that exchange equal amounts of radiation by emission and absorption (even when the steady state is not one of thermodynamic equilibrium, but is one in which some sub-processes include net transport of matter or energy including radiation). Radiative exchange equilibrium is very nearly the same as Prevost's relative radiative equilibrium.
Approximate radiative exchange equilibrium
To a first approximation, an example of radiative exchange equilibrium is in the exchange of non-window wavelength thermal radiation between the land-and-sea surface and the lowest atmosphere, when there is a clear sky. As a first approximation (W. C. Swinbank 1963, G. W. Paltridge and C. M. R. Platt 1976, pages 139–140), in the non-window wavenumbers, there is zero net exchange between the surface and the atmosphere, while, in the window wavenumbers, there is simply direct radiation from the land-sea surface to space. A like situation occurs between adjacent layers in the turbulently mixed boundary layer of the lower troposphere, expressed in the so-called "cooling to space approximation", first noted by C. D. Rodgers and C. D. Walshaw (1966).
In astronomy and planetary science
Global radiative equilibrium
Global radiative equilibrium can be defined for an entire passive celestial system that does not supply its own energy, such as a planet.
Liou (2002, page 459) and other authors use the term global radiative equilibrium to refer to radiative exchange equilibrium globally between Earth and extraterrestrial space; such authors intend to mean that, in the theoretical, incoming solar radiation absorbed by Earth's surface and its atmosphere would be equal to outgoing longwave radiation from Earth's surface and its atmosphere. Prevost would say then that the Earth's surface and its atmosphere regarded as a whole were in absolute radiative equilibrium. Some texts, for example Satoh (2004), simply refer to "radiative equilibrium" in referring to global exchange radiative equilibrium.
Planetary equilibrium temperature
The various global temperatures that may be theoretically conceived for any planet in general can be computed. Such temperatures include the planetary equilibrium temperature, equivalent blackbody temperature or effective radiation emission temperature of the planet. For a planet with an atmosphere, these temperatures can be different than the mean surface temperature, which may be measured as the global-mean surface air temperature, or as the global-mean surface skin temperature.
A radiative equilibrium temperature is calculated for the case that the supply of energy from within the planet (for example, from chemical or nuclear sources) is negligibly small; this assumption is reasonable for Earth, but fails, for example, for calculating the temperature of Jupiter, for which internal energy sources are larger than the incident solar radiation, and hence the actual temperature is higher than the theoretical radiative equilibrium.
Stellar equilibrium
A star supplies its own energy from nuclear sources, and hence the temperature equilibrium cannot be defined in terms of incident energy only.
Cox and Giuli (1968/1984) define 'radiative equilibrium' for a star, taken as a whole and not confining attention only to its atmosphere, when the rate of transfer as heat of energy from nuclear reactions plus viscosity to the microscopic motions of the material particles of the star is just balanced by the transfer of energy by electromagnetic radiation from the star to space. Note that this radiative equilibrium is slightly different from the previous usage. They note that a star that is radiating energy to space cannot be in a steady state of temperature distribution unless there is a supply of energy, in this case, energy from nuclear reactions within the star, to support the radiation to space. Likewise the condition that is used for the above definition of pointwise radiative equilibrium cannot hold throughout a star that is radiating: internally, the star is in a steady state of temperature distribution, not internal thermodynamic equilibrium. Cox and Giuli's definition allows them to say at the same time that a star is in a steady state of temperature distribution and is in 'radiative equilibrium'; they are assuming that all the radiative energy to space comes from within the star.
Mechanisms
When there is enough matter in a region to allow molecular collisions to occur very much more often than absorption or emission of photons, for radiation one speaks of local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE). In this case, Kirchhoff's law of equality of radiative absorptivity and emissivity holds.
Two bodies in radiative exchange equilibrium, each in its own local thermodynamic equilibrium, have the same temperature and their radiative exchange complies with the Stokes-Helmholtz reciprocity principle.
References
- Prevost, P. (1791). "Mémoire sur l'equilibre du feu". Journal de Physique. 38. Paris: Bachelier: 314–322.
- Maxwell, J.C. (1871). Theory of Heat, Longmans, Green and Co, London, pages 221–222.
- Partington, J.R. (1949). An Advanced Treatise on Physical Chemistry, volume 1, Fundamental Principles. The Properties of Gases, Longmans, Green and Co, London, page 467.
- Planck, M. (1914). The Theory of Heat Radiation, second edition translated by M. Masius, P. Blakiston's Son and Co., Philadelphia, 1914.
- Mihalas, D., Weibel-Mihalas, B. (1984). Foundations of Radiation Hydrodynamics, Oxford University Press, New York Archived 2011-10-08 at the Wayback Machine ISBN 0-19-503437-6.
- Goody, R.M., Yung, Y.L. (1989). Atmospheric Radiation. Theoretical Basis, second edition, Oxford University Press, New York, 1989, ISBN 0-19-505134-3.
- Mihalas, D. (1978). Stellar Atmospheres, 2nd edition, Freeman, San Francisco, ISBN 0-7167-0359-9.
- Schwarzschild, K. (1906). Ueber das Gleichgewicht der Sonnenatmosphaere. Nachrichten von der Koeniglichen Gessellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Goettingen. Math.-phys. Klasse 195: 41–53. Translation in Selected Papers on the Transfer of Radiation, ed. D.H. Menzel, Dover, New York, 1966.
- Chandrasekhar, S. (1950). Radiative Transfer, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1950.
- Swinbank, W.C. (963). Long-wave radiation from clear skies, Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 89: 339–348.
- Paltridge, G.W., Platt, C.M.R., (1976). Radiative Processes in Meteorology and Climatology, Elsevier, Amsterdam, ISBN 0-444-41444-4.
- Rodgers, C.D., Walshaw, C.D. (1966). The computation of infrared cooling rate in planetary atmospheres, Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 92: 67–92.
- Paltridge, G.W., Platt, C.M.R., (1976). Radiative Processes in Meteorology and Climatology, Elsevier, Amsterdam, ISBN 0-444-41444-4, page 172.
- Goody, R.M., Yung, Y.L. (1989). Atmospheric Radiation: Theoretical Basis, 2nd edition, Oxford University Press, Oxford, New York, 1989, ISBN 0-19-505134-3, page 250.
- Wallace, J.M., Hobbs, P.V. (2006). Atmospheric Science: An Introductory Survey, 2nd edition, Elsevier, Amsterdam, ISBN 978-0-12-732951-2, page 138.
- Liou, K.N. (2002). An Introduction to Atmospheric Radiation, second edition, Academic Press, Amsterdam, 2002, ISBN 978-0-12-451451-5.
- Satoh, M. (2004). Atmospheric Circulation Dynamics and General Circulation Models, Springer-Praxis, Chichester UK, ISBN 3-540-42638-8, page 370.
- Wallace, J.M., Hobbs, P.V. (2006). Atmospheric Science. An Introductory Survey, second edition, Elsevier, Amsterdam, ISBN 978-0-12-732951-2. Section 4.3.3, pp. 119–120.
- Stull, R. (2000). Meteorology For Scientists and Engineers. A technical companion book with Ahrens' Meteorology Today, Brooks/Cole, Belmont CA, ISBN 978-0-534-37214-9, p. 400.
- Wallace, J.M., Hobbs, P.V. (2006). Atmospheric Science. An Introductory Survey, second edition, Elsevier, Amsterdam, ISBN 978-0-12-732951-2., p.444.
- Zhou, D. K.; Larar, A. M.; Liu, X. (2021). "Surface Skin Temperature and Its Trend Observations From IASI on Board MetOp Satellites". IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing. 14: 1665–1675. doi:10.1109/JSTARS.2020.3046421.
- Aumann, H. H.; Gillespie, C. M., Jr.; and Low, F. J. (July 1969). The Internal Powers and Effective Temperatures of Jupiter and Saturn", Astrophysical Journal, 157 p. L69. DOI: 10.1086/180388. Retrieved 2019-06-19.
- Cox, J.P. with Giuli, R.T. (1968, reprint 1984). Principles of Stellar Structure, Gordon and Breach, New York, ISBN 0-677-01950-5, page 134.
- Milne, E.A. (1928). The effect of collisions on monochromatic radiative equilibrium, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 88: 493–502
Radiative equilibrium is the condition where the total thermal radiation leaving an object is equal to the total thermal radiation entering it It is one of the several requirements for thermodynamic equilibrium but it can occur in the absence of thermodynamic equilibrium There are various types of radiative equilibrium which is itself a kind of dynamic equilibrium DefinitionsEquilibrium in general is a state in which opposing forces are balanced and hence a system does not change in time Radiative equilibrium is the specific case of thermal equilibrium for the case in which the exchange of heat is done by radiative heat transfer There are several types of radiative equilibrium Prevost s definitions An important early contribution was made by Pierre Prevost in 1791 Prevost considered that what is nowadays called the photon gas or electromagnetic radiation was a fluid that he called free heat Prevost proposed that free radiant heat is a very rare fluid rays of which like light rays pass through each other without detectable disturbance of their passage Prevost s theory of exchanges stated that each body radiates to and receives radiation from other bodies The radiation from each body is emitted regardless of the presence or absence of other bodies Prevost in 1791 offered the following definitions translated Absolute equilibrium of free heat is the state of this fluid in a portion of space which receives as much of it as it lets escape Relative equilibrium of free heat is the state of this fluid in two portions of space which receive from each other equal quantities of heat and which moreover are in absolute equilibrium or experience precisely equal changes Prevost went on to comment that The heat of several portions of space at the same temperature and next to one another is at the same time in the two species of equilibrium Pointwise radiative equilibrium Following Max Planck 1914 a radiative field is often described in terms of specific radiative intensity which is a function of each geometrical point in a space region at an instant of time This is slightly different from Prevost s mode of definition which was for regions of space It is also slightly conceptually different from Prevost s definition Prevost thought in terms of bound and free heat while today we think in terms of heat in kinetic and other dynamic energy of molecules that is to say heat in matter and the thermal photon gas A detailed definition is given by R M Goody and Y L Yung 1989 They think of the interconversion between thermal radiation and heat in matter From the specific radiative intensity they derive Fn displaystyle mathbf F nu the monochromatic vector flux density of radiation at each point in a region of space which is equal to the time averaged monochromatic Poynting vector at that point D Mihalas 1978 on pages 9 11 They define the monochromatic volume specific rate of gain of heat by matter from radiation as the negative of the divergence of the monochromatic flux density vector it is a scalar function of the position of the point hn Fn displaystyle h nu nabla cdot mathbf F nu They define pointwise monochromatic radiative equilibrium by Fn 0 displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf F nu 0 at every point of the region that is in radiative equilibrium They define pointwise radiative equilibrium by h 0 hndn 0 displaystyle h int 0 infty h nu d nu 0 at every point of the region that is in radiative equilibrium This means that at every point of the region of space that is in pointwise radiative equilibrium the total for all frequencies of radiation interconversion of energy between thermal radiation and energy content in matter is nil zero Pointwise radiative equilibrium is closely related to Prevost s absolute radiative equilibrium D Mihalas and B Weibel Mihalas 1984 emphasise that this definition applies to a static medium in which the matter is not moving They also consider moving media Approximate pointwise radiative equilibrium Karl Schwarzschild in 1906 considered a system in which convection and radiation both operated but radiation was so much more efficient than convection that convection could be as an approximation neglected and radiation could be considered predominant This applies when the temperature is very high as for example in a star but not in a planet s atmosphere Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar 1950 page 290 writes of a model of a stellar atmosphere in which there are no mechanisms other than radiation for transporting heat within the atmosphere and there are no sources of heat in the surrounding This is hardly different from Schwarzschild s 1906 approximate concept but is more precisely stated Radiative exchange equilibrium Planck 1914 page 40 refers to a condition of thermodynamic equilibrium in which any two bodies or elements of bodies selected at random exchange by radiation equal amounts of heat with each other The term radiative exchange equilibrium can also be used to refer to two specified regions of space that exchange equal amounts of radiation by emission and absorption even when the steady state is not one of thermodynamic equilibrium but is one in which some sub processes include net transport of matter or energy including radiation Radiative exchange equilibrium is very nearly the same as Prevost s relative radiative equilibrium Approximate radiative exchange equilibrium To a first approximation an example of radiative exchange equilibrium is in the exchange of non window wavelength thermal radiation between the land and sea surface and the lowest atmosphere when there is a clear sky As a first approximation W C Swinbank 1963 G W Paltridge and C M R Platt 1976 pages 139 140 in the non window wavenumbers there is zero net exchange between the surface and the atmosphere while in the window wavenumbers there is simply direct radiation from the land sea surface to space A like situation occurs between adjacent layers in the turbulently mixed boundary layer of the lower troposphere expressed in the so called cooling to space approximation first noted by C D Rodgers and C D Walshaw 1966 In astronomy and planetary scienceGlobal radiative equilibrium Global radiative equilibrium can be defined for an entire passive celestial system that does not supply its own energy such as a planet Liou 2002 page 459 and other authors use the term global radiative equilibrium to refer to radiative exchange equilibrium globally between Earth and extraterrestrial space such authors intend to mean that in the theoretical incoming solar radiation absorbed by Earth s surface and its atmosphere would be equal to outgoing longwave radiation from Earth s surface and its atmosphere Prevost would say then that the Earth s surface and its atmosphere regarded as a whole were in absolute radiative equilibrium Some texts for example Satoh 2004 simply refer to radiative equilibrium in referring to global exchange radiative equilibrium Planetary equilibrium temperature The various global temperatures that may be theoretically conceived for any planet in general can be computed Such temperatures include the planetary equilibrium temperature equivalent blackbody temperature or effective radiation emission temperature of the planet For a planet with an atmosphere these temperatures can be different than the mean surface temperature which may be measured as the global mean surface air temperature or as the global mean surface skin temperature A radiative equilibrium temperature is calculated for the case that the supply of energy from within the planet for example from chemical or nuclear sources is negligibly small this assumption is reasonable for Earth but fails for example for calculating the temperature of Jupiter for which internal energy sources are larger than the incident solar radiation and hence the actual temperature is higher than the theoretical radiative equilibrium Stellar equilibrium A star supplies its own energy from nuclear sources and hence the temperature equilibrium cannot be defined in terms of incident energy only Cox and Giuli 1968 1984 define radiative equilibrium for a star taken as a whole and not confining attention only to its atmosphere when the rate of transfer as heat of energy from nuclear reactions plus viscosity to the microscopic motions of the material particles of the star is just balanced by the transfer of energy by electromagnetic radiation from the star to space Note that this radiative equilibrium is slightly different from the previous usage They note that a star that is radiating energy to space cannot be in a steady state of temperature distribution unless there is a supply of energy in this case energy from nuclear reactions within the star to support the radiation to space Likewise the condition that is used for the above definition of pointwise radiative equilibrium cannot hold throughout a star that is radiating internally the star is in a steady state of temperature distribution not internal thermodynamic equilibrium Cox and Giuli s definition allows them to say at the same time that a star is in a steady state of temperature distribution and is in radiative equilibrium they are assuming that all the radiative energy to space comes from within the star MechanismsWhen there is enough matter in a region to allow molecular collisions to occur very much more often than absorption or emission of photons for radiation one speaks of local thermodynamic equilibrium LTE In this case Kirchhoff s law of equality of radiative absorptivity and emissivity holds Two bodies in radiative exchange equilibrium each in its own local thermodynamic equilibrium have the same temperature and their radiative exchange complies with the Stokes Helmholtz reciprocity principle ReferencesPrevost P 1791 Memoire sur l equilibre du feu Journal de Physique 38 Paris Bachelier 314 322 Maxwell J C 1871 Theory of Heat Longmans Green and Co London pages 221 222 Partington J R 1949 An Advanced Treatise on Physical Chemistry volume 1 Fundamental Principles The Properties of Gases Longmans Green and Co London page 467 Planck M 1914 The Theory of Heat Radiation second edition translated by M Masius P Blakiston s Son and Co Philadelphia 1914 Mihalas D Weibel Mihalas B 1984 Foundations of Radiation Hydrodynamics Oxford University Press New York Archived 2011 10 08 at the Wayback Machine ISBN 0 19 503437 6 Goody R M Yung Y L 1989 Atmospheric Radiation Theoretical Basis second edition Oxford University Press New York 1989 ISBN 0 19 505134 3 Mihalas D 1978 Stellar Atmospheres 2nd edition Freeman San Francisco ISBN 0 7167 0359 9 Schwarzschild K 1906 Ueber das Gleichgewicht der Sonnenatmosphaere Nachrichten von der Koeniglichen Gessellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Goettingen Math phys Klasse 195 41 53 Translation in Selected Papers on the Transfer of Radiation ed D H Menzel Dover New York 1966 Chandrasekhar S 1950 Radiative Transfer Oxford University Press Oxford 1950 Swinbank W C 963 Long wave radiation from clear skies Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 89 339 348 Paltridge G W Platt C M R 1976 Radiative Processes in Meteorology and Climatology Elsevier Amsterdam ISBN 0 444 41444 4 Rodgers C D Walshaw C D 1966 The computation of infrared cooling rate in planetary atmospheres Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 92 67 92 Paltridge G W Platt C M R 1976 Radiative Processes in Meteorology and Climatology Elsevier Amsterdam ISBN 0 444 41444 4 page 172 Goody R M Yung Y L 1989 Atmospheric Radiation Theoretical Basis 2nd edition Oxford University Press Oxford New York 1989 ISBN 0 19 505134 3 page 250 Wallace J M Hobbs P V 2006 Atmospheric Science An Introductory Survey 2nd edition Elsevier Amsterdam ISBN 978 0 12 732951 2 page 138 Liou K N 2002 An Introduction to Atmospheric Radiation second edition Academic Press Amsterdam 2002 ISBN 978 0 12 451451 5 Satoh M 2004 Atmospheric Circulation Dynamics and General Circulation Models Springer Praxis Chichester UK ISBN 3 540 42638 8 page 370 Wallace J M Hobbs P V 2006 Atmospheric Science An Introductory Survey second edition Elsevier Amsterdam ISBN 978 0 12 732951 2 Section 4 3 3 pp 119 120 Stull R 2000 Meteorology For Scientists and Engineers A technical companion book with Ahrens Meteorology Today Brooks Cole Belmont CA ISBN 978 0 534 37214 9 p 400 Wallace J M Hobbs P V 2006 Atmospheric Science An Introductory Survey second edition Elsevier Amsterdam ISBN 978 0 12 732951 2 p 444 Zhou D K Larar A M Liu X 2021 Surface Skin Temperature and Its Trend Observations From IASI on Board MetOp Satellites IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing 14 1665 1675 doi 10 1109 JSTARS 2020 3046421 Aumann H H Gillespie C M Jr and Low F J July 1969 The Internal Powers and Effective Temperatures of Jupiter and Saturn Astrophysical Journal 157 p L69 DOI 10 1086 180388 Retrieved 2019 06 19 Cox J P with Giuli R T 1968 reprint 1984 Principles of Stellar Structure Gordon and Breach New York ISBN 0 677 01950 5 page 134 Milne E A 1928 The effect of collisions on monochromatic radiative equilibrium Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 88 493 502