2008 APS March Meeting 
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session L3: The Physics of Climate and Climate Change
2:30 PM–5:30 PM, 
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Morial Convention Center 
Room: RO2 - RO3
Sponsoring
Unit: 
DFD
Chair: John Wettlaufer, Yale University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.L3.1
Abstract: L3.00001 : The Disordered Kinetics of Earth's Carbon Cycle
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
Preview Abstract
  
Abstract   
Author:
Daniel Rothman
(Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, MIT)
The carbon cycle describes the transformations of carbon as it
cycles 
through living organisms and the physical environment. In its 
simplest form, the cycle amounts to a loop between photosynthesis
and 
respiration. Photosynthesis produces organic carbon and
molecular 
oxygen from carbon dioxide and water. Respiration reverses the 
process by oxidation of organic carbon. The duration of the
cycle 
spans a vast range of time scales: from days or less for
fast-growing 
plankton in the oceans, to hundreds of millions of years or more
for 
the small fraction of organic matter that is buried as rock. The
rates at which the cycle is closed set atmospheric carbon dioxide
levels at short time scales and oxygen levels at geologic time
scales. 
Respiration rates thereby influence not only climate---by the 
determination of equilibrium carbon dioxide concentrations---but
also 
biological evolution---because the oxygenation of Earth's
atmosphere 
must have preceded the advent of aerobic metabolism.
We review recent advances in the understanding of the rates that
control the carbon cycle, with emphasis on the respiratory 
back-reaction. Given considerable biological, chemical, and 
environmental variation, it comes as no surprise that
measurements of 
rates vary greatly. Observations suggest, however, some
surprising 
simplicity: for example, the rates of microbial consumption of
organic 
matter in sediments and soils slow down systematically like the 
inverse of the age of the organic matter. This aging effect can
be 
quantitatively understood as the macroscopic observation of 
microscopically disordered kinetics. The disorder can arise
purely 
physically as the consequence of a reaction-diffusion process in
porous media, but any combination of physical, chemical, and 
biological parameters that yield a wide range of rates suffices.
A 
predicted practical consequence is a slow, logarithmic decay of 
organic matter in sediments and soils, which compares well with 
measurements. Further observations suggest that the effects of
such 
disordered kinetics extends to inorganic processes as well. The
carbon cycle thus appears not as a simple reaction network
defined by 
a single set of rates, but rather as complex network in which the
rates of specific reactions can be widely dispersed. We conclude
by 
briefly discussing implications for short-term climate and
long-term 
evolution.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.L3.1