Water and climate regulation
Big idea: Water is Earth's thermostat! It absorbs, stores, and redistributes heat around the planet, keeping temperatures stable enough for life.
How water regulates temperature
- High specific heat capacity — water absorbs large amounts of heat without temperature change (oceans act as heat sinks)
- Latent heat — evaporation absorbs heat (cooling), condensation releases heat (warming)
- Ocean currents — redistribute heat from equator to poles (e.g., Gulf Stream warms Europe)
- Water vapour as a greenhouse gas — traps heat in the atmosphere (positive feedback with warming)
- Albedo — ice and snow reflect sunlight (cooling), open water absorbs it (warming)
For outline-style answers, aim for several distinct points such as: high specific heat capacity, latent heat transfer, ocean currents, water vapour as a greenhouse gas, and albedo effects from ice or snow. One clear point per sentence works well.
Water and the carbon cycle connection
Oceans also regulate climate by acting as carbon sinks. They absorb about 25% of human carbon dioxide emissions, but this contributes to ocean acidification.
Water regulates climate through:
Absorbing heat
Water absorbs large amounts of heat energy without a large increase in temperature, helping to stabilise global climate.
Transporting heat via currents
Ocean currents move warm water from the equator towards the poles and return cooler water to lower latitudes.
Transferring heat via evaporation/condensation
Evaporation absorbs heat and cools the environment, while condensation releases heat and warms the atmosphere.
Albedo effect of ice and snow
Ice and snow reflect incoming solar radiation due to their high albedo, helping to cool the Earth.
Absorbing Carbon dioxide
Oceans act as carbon sinks by absorbing carbon dioxide, reducing the rate of atmospheric warming.