1 / 30

Phys/ENVS 105: Energy Daniel W. Koon Bewkes 221, x5494 Fall 2013

Phys/ENVS 105: Energy Daniel W. Koon Bewkes 221, x5494 Fall 2013. Lecture #1: Wed., 8/28/13 Course Overview Energy : past , present & future http://images.betterworldbooks.com/111/Energy-Hinrichs-Roger-A-9781111990831.jpg. Accessed 8/28/12. Overview/Announcements.

alina
Download Presentation

Phys/ENVS 105: Energy Daniel W. Koon Bewkes 221, x5494 Fall 2013

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Phys/ENVS 105: EnergyDaniel W. KoonBewkes 221, x5494Fall 2013 Lecture #1: Wed., 8/28/13 Course Overview Energy: past, present & future http://images.betterworldbooks.com/111/Energy-Hinrichs-Roger-A-9781111990831.jpg. Accessed 8/28/12.

  2. Overview/Announcements • Syllabus -- Sakai site: https://sakai.stlawu.edu/ • New material:  Energy overview  Friday: Exponential growth and decay

  3. Announcements& Assignments • Handouts: Syllabus, TPS sheets (ABCD) READ SYLLABUS: Quiz Friday? • HW #1: due Monday Chapter 1: 1, 12*, 24** • Camera: take class picture

  4. Energy as a field of Physics, Science • Physics= The User’s Guide to the universe  Quantitative  Observation-based • Observation disagrees with theory? Throw out the theory. • Physicists focus first on the essentials (blowing off the details for now). • Physicists focus on context, the big picture.

  5. The Importance of Context Proper units help keep things in context. 2010 BP oil spill: • Up to 4.9 million barrels of oil. Is that a lot? • 0.03 Quads vs 100Quads/yr US use. (Quad = quadrillion BTUs =1015 BTU = 1,000,000,000,000,000 BTU) • equivalent to 2.5hr of total US energy use Image: http://www.burdr.com/2010/05/deepwater-horizon-oil-spill-on-60-minutes/. Accessed 8/22/11.

  6. Wind farm near Chateaugay, NY, 2009. Energy: past, present and future

  7. Human population through the ages Miller, G. T., Living in the Environment, 7th ed., Wadsworth: Belmont, CA (1992), p. 4. Taube, M., Materie, Energie und die Zukunft des Menschen, 1st ed., S. Hirzel, Wissentschaftliche Verlagsgesellschaft: Stuttgart (1988), p. 310. As cited in Gross, K. J., Thesis, University of Fribourg (Switzerland), 1998.

  8. Per capitaenergy use throughtheages NOTE: 20W = 400 food calories / day “International Energy Annual”, Energy Information Administration, US Dept. of Energy (1997). Miller, G. T., Living in the Environment, 7th ed., Wadsworth: Belmont, CA (1992), p. 32. Taube, M., Materie, Energie und die Zukunft des Menschen, 1st ed., S. Hirzel, Wissentschaftliche Verlagsgesellschaft: Stuttgart (1988), p. 216. Gates, D. M., Energy and Ecology, 1st ed. Sinauer Associates: Sunderland, MA (1985). As cited in Gross, K. J., Thesis, University of Fribourg (Switzerland), 1998.

  9. Fuel energy content • Food 2 kWh/kg • Wood 5 • Coal 7 • Anthracite 10 • Petroleum 12 • Methane (Natl. gas) 15 • Hydrogen 40 • Uranium fission 2×107 • Hydrogen fusion 15×107 • Solar, wind infinite

  10. U.S. fuel preference history Fig. 1-6, p. 11

  11. History of US energy use by fuel Text: Fig. 1-2, p. 7

  12. World Energy consumption US: 4.5% of world population; 20% of world energy use (wikipedia from 2008-2010 data) MAIN MAP: Unknown year. http://cartogram.w3ec.com/. Accessed 8/11/2010. INSET: Population, unknown year: http://www.ribbonfarm.com/2007/07/17/visualizing-the-2d-world-with-cartograms/. Accessed 8/17/2010.

  13. Global Oil consumption, 2009 Sources: BP Statistical Review of World Energy; The Guardian . http://blogs.edf.org/restorationandresilience/category/deepwater-horizon/ -- Accessed 8/11/2010.

  14. Origin of US Oil Imports, 2009 Lugar Energy Initiative, http://lugar.senate.gov/energy/graphs/crude.html. Accessed 8/11/2010.

  15. Origin of US Oil Imports, 2009 http://www.ngoilgas.com/media/media-news/infographics/090911-OGUS-USOilImports.png. Accessed 8/28/2013.

  16. Energy consumption by country Unknown year and source. http://sites.google.com/site/thepoliticsofsacrifice/. Accessed 8/11/2010.

  17. Energy use vs Per capita GDP “David Roland-Holst's chart,... based on World Bank and International Energy Agency data, the vertical axis plots per capita energy use in terajoules/year; the horizontal is per capita income as measured by the GDP. Bubble sizes represent population.” Accessed 8/11/2010.

  18. Total U.S. energy flow, 2011 http://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.cfm?id=9170, accessed 8/20/13. Energy in Quadrillions of BTUs, or Quads

  19. Study question Which of the following statements is true? a) Residential/Commercial, Industrial, and Transportation sectors in the US use approximately the same amount of energy per year. b) Most fossil fuel consumed in the US is imported. c) Most fuel consumed in the US is imported. d) The chief US energy export is natural gas.

  20. How long will it last? Update to Table 1.1, p. 15

  21. But demand is increasing... http://www.kids.esdb.bg/usesectors.html. Accessed 8/11/2010.

  22. History of US petroleum supply, by origin Fig. 1-7, p. 11

  23. US oil & natural gas production (Hubbert curve in dashes) Fig. 1-12, p. 19 Fig. 1-13, p. 20

  24. Impact of industrialization on the environment: Miller, G. T., Living in the Environment, 7th ed., Wadsworth: Belmont, CA (1992), p. 285. As cited in Gross, K. J., Thesis, University of Fribourg (Switzerland), 1998.

  25. Impact of industrialization on the environment:

  26. Greenhouse gases -- origins World Resources Institute. http://cait.wri.org/figures.php?page=/World-FlowChart. Accessed 8/11/2010.

  27. Study questions A study of carbon dioxide content in the atmosphere and global temperatures shows a) A modest correlation between the two. b) A very strong correlation going back to about 1000AD. c) A very strong correlation going back about 160,000 years. d) A very strong correlation that breaks down over the last hundred years or so.

  28. Study questions An increase in CO2 in the atmosphere since the Industrial Revolution a) Has not been observed yet. b) Has been claimed by some but the evidence for an actual increase is controversial. c) Has been definitively observed to be smaller than increases between the Ice Ages. d) Has pushed CO2 level in the atmosphere above its previous values during or between the Ice Ages.

  29. Study questions How many of the following statements about atmospheric methane levels are true? I. Methane is not a “greenhouse” gas. II. Changes in methane levels over the last 100 years are correlated to changes in CO2 levels. III. The data shows that methane levels have already contributed to global warming. a) II only b) II and III only c) I and III only d) All of the above.

  30. What have we learned? • US 5% of the world’s population; 20% of energy use. • US = 100Q, stable. World: 500Q & increasing. • Cow toots (methane) and doots are evil. • Canada & Mexico are our main energy suppliers.  • Hubbert curve predicts future history • There may be syllabus quiz Friday!!

More Related