Submitted by _Dnikeb t3_11tln6y in askscience
I remember my teacher explaining that greenhouses keep the environment inside them warm because glass lets most visible light in but no infrared out, making new heat, and that's also what CO2 and lots of other gasses do, hence the greenhouse effect we all know and love.
However, some people say that this theory is outdated and infrared has nothing to do with it, but instead greenhouses work by limiting air exchange, so if you keep the same air in the same sun-exposed enclosure for a long time it's going to get warmer simply because it can't mix with outside air. So no new heat is made, it's just trapped in place, and therefore the term "greenhouse effect" as applied to the earth's atmosphere is a misnomer.
So who's right?
[deleted] t1_jcnuah3 wrote
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