- #1
cesiumfrog
- 2,010
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How can the ocean simultaneously release CO2 and decrease in pH?
Currently the ocean is acidifying, as it absorbs about a third of the fossil-carbon dioxide that we emit, which then in part assumes the form of carbonic acid. But in the future, if the increasing atmospheric greenhouse effect continues to also warm the ocean enough, we expect this absorption will be reversed and vast quantities of CO2 will distil out from the ocean.
Nonetheless, apparently we do not expect warming to cause any reverse to the acidification. (I asked one paleoceanographer/marine-chemist, and heard there is no contradiction for water to be simultaneously decreasing in pH and liberating CO2.) But naively, if warmed water begins losing carbon, then shouldn't the concentration of carbonic acid fall (and hence the pH start to rise back again)?
Edit: The topic of this thread is not "global warming or climate change". It is purely an ocean-chemistry question. Regardless of what is actually happening to our ocean (or rather, regardless of what external factors may be controlling the temperature of and the partial pressure of CO2 above a hypothetical test-ocean) the question is simply whether in principle such an ocean hypothetically could ever be driven (by adjusting those two parameters) to release CO2 while simultaneously to decrease in pH, and how exactly? (So this is what self-censorship is like..)
Currently the ocean is acidifying, as it absorbs about a third of the fossil-carbon dioxide that we emit, which then in part assumes the form of carbonic acid. But in the future, if the increasing atmospheric greenhouse effect continues to also warm the ocean enough, we expect this absorption will be reversed and vast quantities of CO2 will distil out from the ocean.
Nonetheless, apparently we do not expect warming to cause any reverse to the acidification. (I asked one paleoceanographer/marine-chemist, and heard there is no contradiction for water to be simultaneously decreasing in pH and liberating CO2.) But naively, if warmed water begins losing carbon, then shouldn't the concentration of carbonic acid fall (and hence the pH start to rise back again)?
Edit: The topic of this thread is not "global warming or climate change". It is purely an ocean-chemistry question. Regardless of what is actually happening to our ocean (or rather, regardless of what external factors may be controlling the temperature of and the partial pressure of CO2 above a hypothetical test-ocean) the question is simply whether in principle such an ocean hypothetically could ever be driven (by adjusting those two parameters) to release CO2 while simultaneously to decrease in pH, and how exactly? (So this is what self-censorship is like..)
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