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March 14, 2007
NASA STUDIES HOW
AIRBORNE PARTICLES AFFECT CLIMATE CHANGE
A recent NASA study links natural
and human-made aerosol particles to how much Earth warms or cools.
Earth's
atmosphere acts as a protective shield that regulates how much solar
energy the
planet absorbs or deflects. The Intercontinental Chemical Transport
Experiment
studied how chemicals and pollution affect that protective shield by
measuring
air flowing from North America and across the Atlantic
Ocean.
"The majority of aerosols form a layer of haze near the Earth's
surface,
which can cause either a cooling or warming effect, depending on
aerosol type
and location," said Jens Redemann, lead author of the science paper at
NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.
Different types of aerosol particles can influence visible light and
other
kinds of radiation, affecting climate and temperatures, the scientists
reported. "Changing the flow of radiation – including light
– above and
within the atmosphere changes the energy available for driving Earth's
climate," said Phil Russell, also a NASA Ames scientist.
"Our study measured how aerosols change the flow of solar energy,"
Russell said. This solar energy includes visible light and also
radiation at
shorter and longer wavelengths in the ultraviolet and infrared ranges.
To find out the extent to which tiny particles in the air could affect
climate,
NASA scientists flew in a low-flying aircraft over the dark waters of
the Gulf
of Maine.
Two types of instruments on the
aircraft measured radiation from the sun.
Radiometers – devices that measure the intensity of radiant
energy – measured
total solar energy coming from all directions. At the same time, a sun
photometer – an instrument that measures the intensity of the
sun’s light –
measured sunlight coming directly, straight from the sun through the
atmosphere. The quantity of aerosols in the atmosphere between the sun
photometer and the sun is proportional to the difference between the
light
intensity measured by the sun photometer and the amount of light that
would
pass through an aerosol-free atmosphere.
Combining measurements of total solar light intensity from all
directions,
solar light intensity directly, straight from the sun, and the amount
of
aerosols in the atmospheric column, scientists can estimate how much of
the
sun’s energy is scattered (redirected) and absorbed (causes
heating) by
atmospheric aerosols. These measurements are useful to climate
scientists as a
reality check for computer climate models.
For
more information about the
Intercontinental Chemical Transport Experiment, visit:
http://www.espo.nasa.gov/
##
Contact:
Ruth Dasso Marlaire
NASA
Ames Research Center
650-604-4709
rmarlaire@mail.arc.nasa.gov
This text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/news/releases/2007/07_12AR.html
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