“…More specifically, research has revealed the following issues (Besson, De Ambrosis, & Mascheretti, 2010;: (i) infrared emission of bodies is usually not taken into account as an energy-loss mechanism, (ii) emittance, when considered, is often confused with reflectance, (iii) students tend to give absolute meaning to properties like transparency, absorptivity and emissivity, rather than seeing them as interactive properties, (iv) radiation is often confused with heat, and (v) students tend to apply a temporal or linear causal reasoning (Rozier & Viennot, 1991) for explaining processes instead of causal schemes based on balancing and equilibration (diSessa, 2014). These tendencies lead students to interpret the greenhouse effect with the naïf metaphor of "trapping" (Besson et al, 2010) which is not only misleading but also ineffective for grasping concepts such as feedback. The known difficulties are not surprising since the crucial physics concepts involved in understanding the greenhouse effect (e.g.…”