The Rebel Faction

Register today to customize your account.
Galactic Citizen

The Rebel Faction » Forums » General Discussion » Rebel Cafe » And in a shocking turn, the world pulls a Dolash

>>>12

1  9:05pm 19/05/04        
Blink If You Can Hear Me
Gradual "World Dimming" may counter the effect of global warming.

'Global dimming' may stop the Earth overheating.
19 May 2004

MARK PEPLOW


Scattered light helps plants suck up carbon dioxide.
© GettyImages
It's official: the world is getting darker. Scientists now agree that as cloud cover and particles in the atmosphere increase, the amount of radiation reaching us from the Sun is falling. And although they are nervous about raising the idea, they think the effect may help protect us from global warming.

The phenomenon, called global dimming, has been quietly discussed in scientific circles for the past decade or so. Since the late 1950s, scientists have observed a 2-4% reduction each decade in the amount of solar radiation reaching the Earth's surface, which is thought to be caused by particles and clouds in the atmosphere scattering the light.

But previous studies have been confined to the Northern Hemisphere, so many scientists have questioned whether this is a localized effect, or if it even exists at all.

Advocates of the idea now have the evidence they need to convince the sceptics. A presentation by Australian scientists to the Joint Assembly of the American and Canadian Geophysical Unions in Montreal on Monday has shown that the effect is also found south of the equator.

The researchers found that evaporation rates in Australia have fallen significantly over the last 30 years, a sure sign that less thermal radiation is reaching the surface. "This proves that it is a global phenomenon," says Michael Roderick, an environmental scientist at the Australian National University, Canberra, who led the research.

But Roderick is not dismayed by the result. He has recently advised the Australian government that global dimming may be a good thing. "The standard dogma is that Australia will dry out [with global warming], but that's just not right. The world is actually getting less arid," he insists.

In fact, Roderick sees global dimming as part of a negative feedback loop that allows the atmosphere to regulate itself. Burning fossil fuels not only increases carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere; it also pumps tiny particles into the air. At the same time, higher temperatures increase the amount of cloud cover. The clouds and particles help to block the Sun's rays, and the scattered light they allow through actually boosts plants' absorption of carbon dioxide, the principle greenhouse gas. This helps to keep carbon dioxide levels stable, argues Roderick, protecting the planet from runaway global warming

Grey expectations

"Diffuse light is like putting plants on steroids," Roderick explains. Scattered light takes a zigzag path, bathing every part of a plant's leaf in light instead of just one surface. Even if the overall amount of light is lower, this increases the plant's rate of photosynthesis and more carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere.

The only plants that might suffer are those in northern European greenhouses, because they are so desperate for light that any reduction could affect their growth.

This week's conference is the first time that all the leading scientists in the field have met, and it puts global dimming firmly on the research map. But Shep Cohen from the Institute of Soil, Water and Environmental Sciences in Bet Dagan, Israel, says that some of his colleagues are still anxious about discussing the effect in public, in case it is seen as an excuse not to worry about global warming.

However, Cohen points out that understanding global dimming is essential for working out the best strategies for tackling pollution and climate change. For example, the half measure of filtering out particles while continuing to pump carbon dioxide into the air could destabilize the relationship between the two and actually increase global warming, he warns.

© Nature News Service / Macmillan Magazines Ltd 2004


www.nature.com/nsu/040517/040517-7.html



www.agu.org/
www.agu.org/journals/gl/
OS: In a world of bon-bons, you are a twinkie.
Ahnk: God damn you, I am Count Chocula and you know it.
I'm not spending my anniversary night thumping my head against the wall. - Damalis, on Moderating TRF
Then tell him you want it harder, damnit! - Ahnk, on Damalis
2  9:08pm 19/05/04        
Return of the King of the Cafe!
'Pulls a Dolash?'
3  12:59am 20/05/04        
friend of the sleeping pill
Well good then. I guess that means that Ford can fill up China with SUVs without feeling guilty.

Not that they would have felt guilty in the first place.
4  3:04am 20/05/04        
The Emperor<br> Almighty Bastard
Anyone watch the Animatrix where they purposely blocked out the sun with polution because the machines were all solar powered?

Some of those movies were so tight.
Gash Jiren
5  3:27am 20/05/04        
Avatar
The Emperor<br> Almighty Bastard
What the @#%$ does "pulls a Dolash" mean anyway? Someone explain that.
6  1:38pm 20/05/04        
Return of the King of the Cafe!
I asked Ahnk, he said it involves the world getting 'Dimmer'. Apparently, like me.
7  12:03am 21/05/04        
Blink If You Can Hear Me
*whistles innocently*
OS: In a world of bon-bons, you are a twinkie.
Ahnk: God damn you, I am Count Chocula and you know it.
I'm not spending my anniversary night thumping my head against the wall. - Damalis, on Moderating TRF
Then tell him you want it harder, damnit! - Ahnk, on Damalis
8  1:15am 21/05/04        
Internaut
In the seventy's, they said the world was cooling, and that if we didn't do something quick the ice cap would dance a jig in twenty years. Then came global warming, and the ice cap was threatening to do a jig if we don't do something quick in twenty years. Now, the earth is dimming.

In twenty years, we'll be loosing our cloud cover because americans eat too many beans, and the farts are polluting the atmosphere. Whoopie.
9  1:23am 21/05/04        
friend of the sleeping pill
No Kas, that is what is called "an excuse to enable Corporate America to continue with its ruthless gung-ho capitalism at the expense of the planet we live on".

I don't get you corporate apologetics. What do you think, that the atmosphere is going to give you sunshine and candy in exchange for pumping a hundred years of noxious fumes into it? No, it's going to give you lung cancer, melanoma, melted ice caps and a nice healthy serving of death.
10  1:32am 21/05/04        
Internaut
Maybe evolution will decide to kick in, and we'll all turn into enormous crocodile men who can live anywhere.

>>>12