March 15, 2007
GLOBAL
'SUNSCREEN' HAS LIKELY THINNED, REPORT NASA SCIENTISTS
A
new NASA study has found that an
important counter-balance to the warming of our planet by greenhouse
gases –
sunlight blocked by dust, pollution and other aerosol particles
– appears to
have lost ground.
The
thinning of Earth’s
“sunscreen” of aerosols since the early 1990s could
have given an extra push to
the rise in global surface temperatures. The finding, published in the
March 16
issue of Science, may lead to an improved understanding of recent
climate
change. In a related study published last week, scientists found that
the
opposing forces of global warming and the cooling from aerosol-induced
"global dimming" can occur at the same time.
"When more sunlight can get through the atmosphere and warm Earth's
surface, you're going to have an effect on climate and temperature,"
said
lead author Michael Mishchenko of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space
Studies
(GISS), New
York.
"Knowing what aerosols are doing globally gives us an important missing
piece of the big picture of the forces at work on climate."
The study uses the longest uninterrupted satellite record of aerosols
in the
lower atmosphere, a unique set of global estimates funded by NASA.
Scientists
at GISS created the Global Aerosol Climatology Project by extracting a
clear
aerosol signal from satellite measurements originally designed to
observe
clouds and weather systems that date back to 1978. The resulting data
show
large, short-lived spikes in global aerosols caused by major volcanic
eruptions
in 1982 and 1991, but a gradual decline since about 1990. By 2005,
global
aerosols had dropped as much as 20 percent from the relatively stable
level
between 1986 and 1991.
The
NASA study also sheds light on
the puzzling observations by other scientists that the amount of
sunlight
reaching Earth's surface, which had been steadily declining in recent
decades,
suddenly started to rebound around 1990. This switch from a "global
dimming" trend to a "brightening" trend happened just as global
aerosol levels started to decline, Mishchenko said.
While the Science paper does not prove that aerosols are behind the
recent
dimming and brightening trends -- changes in cloud cover have not been
ruled
out -- another new research result supports that conclusion In a paper
published March 8 in the American Geophysical Union's Geophysical
Research Letters, a research team led by Anastasia
Romanou of Columbia University's Department of Applied Physics and
Mathematics,
New York, also showed that the apparently opposing forces of global
warming and
global dimming can occur at the same time.
The GISS research team conducted the most comprehensive experiment to
date
using computer simulations of Earth's 20th-century climate to
investigate the
dimming trend. The combined results from nine state-of-the-art climate
models,
including three from GISS, showed that due to increasing greenhouse
gases and
aerosols, the planet warmed at the same time that direct solar
radiation
reaching the surface decreased. The dimming in the simulations closely
matched
actual measurements of sunlight declines recorded from the 1960s to
1990.
Further
simulations using one of
the Goddard climate models revealed that aerosols blocking sunlight or
trapping
some of the sun's heat high in the atmosphere were the major driver in
20th-century global dimming. "Much of the dimming trend over the
Northern
Hemisphere stems from these direct aerosol effects," Romanou said.
"Aerosols have other effects that contribute to dimming, such as making
clouds more reflective and longer-lasting. These effects were found to
be
almost as important as the direct effects."
The combined effect of global dimming and warming may account for why
one of
the major impacts of a warmer climate -- the spinning up of the water
cycle of
evaporation, more cloud formation and more rainfall -- has not yet been
observed. "Less sunlight reaching the surface counteracts the effect of
warmer air temperatures, so evaporation does not change very much,"
said
Gavin Schmidt of GISS, a co-author of the paper. "Increased aerosols
probably slowed the expected change in the hydrological cycle."
Whether the recent decline in global aerosols will continue is an open
question. A major complicating factor is that aerosols are not
uniformly distributed
across the world and come from many different sources, some natural and
some
produced by humans. While global estimates of total aerosols are
improving and
being extended with new observations by NASA's latest generation of
Earth-observing satellites, finding out whether the recent rise and
fall of
aerosols is due to human activity or natural changes will have to await
the
planned launch of NASA's Glory Mission in 2008.
“One of Glory's two instruments, the Aerosol Polarimetry
Sensor, will have the
unique ability to measure globally the properties of natural and
human-made
aerosols to unprecedented levels of accuracy," said Mishchenko, who is
project scientist on the mission.
For
more information and images,
visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2007/aerosol_dimming.html
For
information on GISS research,
visit:
http://www.giss.nasa.gov/research/
Global Aerosol
Climate Project:
http://gacp.giss.nasa.gov/
NASA's Glory
mission:
http://glory.giss.nasa.gov/
Writer: Steve Cole, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
##
Contact:
Lynn Chandler
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
301-286-2806
This
text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2007/aerosol_dimming.html
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