vanesch
Staff Emeritus
Science Advisor
Gold Member
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Andre said:But it is an assumption, right? maintaining relative humidity constant with increased greenhouse effect, without any visible justification in the decription of all the processes as we attempted here. So one could argue about it being a reasonable assumption seeing the considerable energy required for excess evaporation and because the observations don't appear to confirm the assumptions.
You seem to stick to this "considerable energy required" and "excess evaporation" which I argued all the time, doesn't have anything to do with it.
With lower hadley cell turnover velocities, you can have higher humidities together with less evaporation and hence less required energy for evaporation. However, with higher horizontal mixing you might get lower or higher relative humidities and higher rates of evaporation. As the hadley cell turnover velocity will adapt to the required heat transport, there will never be "lack of energy for evaporation": if any lack is there, the hadley cell turnover will slow down.
You could get higher relative humidities, or lower relative humidities, depending on how mixing of dry and wet air will change as compared to now, and this without putting any burden on "energy required" or even on "evaporation required" and the only way to really find out is to do a very detailed simulation.
I'm not saying that there is any proof that relative humidities will remain constant, just that it is a very sensible assumption if you don't know any better, much more so than assuming that absolute humidities will remain constant, as if "nothing else changes" (although it probably will), the humidities are mainly given by the ocean (and "wet" land) temperatures AND how they mix together with "dry air". If the mixing is done in the same way, and the temperature rises, then there's no reason not to assume that the relative humidities will remain the same (one will mix together 100% wet air with dry air in the same proportions, and the "100% wet air" is determined by the temperature of the water reservoir with which it was in contact). This is NOT fixing any "evaporation rate", as this evaporation rate is determined also by the VELOCITY of the turnover, and this velocity is something that will adapt to whatever heat that has to be transported in order to get the lapse rate close to the adiabatic lapse rate. As this velocity can hence change, the evaporation rate can also change, with given humidities.
In fact, it would be rather difficult to keep "absolute" humidities constant, while having warmer water. Warmer water will normally lead to higher absolute humidities because the evaporation drive is greater in that case.