April 19, 2007
SCIENTISTS TRACK IMPACT OF ASIAN DUST AND POLLUTION ON CLOUDS, CLIMATE CHANGE
Scientists using one of the nation's newest and most capable research aircraft are launching a far-reaching field project this month to study plumes of airborne dust and pollutants that originate in Asia and journey to North America.
The plumes are among the largest such events on Earth, so great in scope that scientists believe they might affect clouds and weather across thousands of miles while interacting with the Sun's radiation and playing a role in global climate.
Known as PACDEX
(Pacific Dust
Experiment), the project will be led by scientists at the
To study the changes
in the
plumes as they move through the atmosphere from
"Aerosol pollutants, such as those to be studied in PACDEX, account for the largest uncertainties in climate forcing," said Jay Fein, program director in NSF's Division of Atmospheric Sciences, which funded the experiment. "PACDEX is addressing this challenging and societally relevant science question."
While many particles in the plumes, such as sulfates, cool the planet by blocking solar radiation from reaching Earth, some particles such as black carbon absorb sunlight as well and therefore may amplify the effects of global warming. PACDEX will help scientists refine computer models of greenhouse gas emissions and improve forecasts of future climate change, both for the entire globe and for specific regions that are especially affected by dust and pollutants.
"PACDEX will open a
window
into what happens to the atmosphere as these massive plumes cross the
"PACDEX comes at a crucial time in our efforts to understand the regional impacts of global warming," says V. Ramanathan, a PACDEX principal investigator based at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. "It will also help us help us examine how the dust and soot modifies storm tracks and cloud systems across the Pacific, which influence North American weather patterns in major ways. By focusing on these plumes, PACDEX will shed light on one of the major environmental issues of this decade."
As Asia's economies
boom,
scientists are increasingly turning their attention to the plumes,
which pack a
combination of industrial emissions (such as soot, smog, and trace
metals) and
dust from storms in regions such as Central Asia's
The plumes can alter global temperatures by interacting with large-scale, mid-latitude cloud systems over the Pacific that reflect enormous amounts of sunlight and help regulate global climate.
The plumes also may affect regional precipitation patterns because water vapor molecules adhere to microscopic particles of dust and pollutants to form water droplets or ice particles that eventually grow and fall out of the clouds as rain or snow.
In addition, the dust and pollutants reduce the amount of light reaching Earth, contributing to a phenomenon known as global dimming that can affect both temperatures and precipitation.
The Gulfstream-V will carry an array of instruments that will enable scientists to both measure clouds and bring dust, pollutants, and cloud particles into the aircraft for study. Scientists will capture ice particles from clouds, evaporate them, study the residue, and then try to recreate the particle in a special moistened chamber to mimic the temperature and moisture conditions that enabled the original ice particle to form.
The international
research team
will include scientists from
Asian organizations
include the
Japanese National Institute for Environmental Studies,
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Contact:
Cheryl
Dybas
National
Science Foundation
703-292-7734
cdybas@nsf.gov
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