Hilfe: Sie befinden sich auf...

DOE/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 27.05.08

Archiv

... einer Artikelseite. Sie zeigt den vollständigen Text einer Nachricht.

Am Fuß der Seite finden Sie drei Boxen mit weiteren Aktionsmöglichkeiten:
Über die linke Box können Sie zum vorhergehenden, bzw. nachfolgenden Artikel in diesem Bereich navigieren.
In der mittleren Box können Sie diesen Artikel bewerten.
In der rechten Box kommen Sie zu einer Druckversion dieses Artikels, Sie können den Link dieses Artikels an einen E-Mail-Empfänger verschicken und Sie können diesen Artikel auf einen Merkzettel legen, um ihn leichter wiederzufinden.

Hilfe: Generell zu dieser Seite

Bei NETZGUT finden Sie Nachrichten aus dem Netz.
Zu der Nachricht Ihres Interesses können Sie auf drei Wegen gelangen:

Im Archiv sind die Nachrichten nach Bereichen getrennt.
Unter Themen finden Sie Nachrichten bereichsübergreifend zu einem bestimmten Thema.
Über die Schlagworte gelangen Sie zu den Artikeln, denen eben jene Schlagworte zugeordnet wurden. Auch diese Einordnung ist bereichsübergreifend.

Übrigens: Der Hilfe-Button gibt Ihnen zu jeder Seite die passenden Informationen.

DOE/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 27.05.08

Geoengineering could slow down the global water cycle

LIVERMORE, Calif. - As fossil fuel emissions continue to climb, reducing the amount of sunlight hitting the Earth would definitely have a cooling effect on surface temperatures.

However, a new study from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, led by atmospheric scientist Govindasamy Bala, shows that this intentional manipulation of solar radiation also could lead to a less intense global water cycle. Decreasing surface temperatures through “geoengineering” also could mean less rainfall.

The reduction in sunlight can be accomplished by geoengineering schemes. There are two classes: the so-called “sunshade” geoengineering scheme, which would mitigate climate change by intentionally manipulating the solar radiation on the earth's surface; the other category removes atmospheric CO2 and sequesters it into the terrestrial vegetation, oceans or deep geologic formations.

In the new climate modeling study, which appears in the May 27-30 early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Bala and his colleagues Karl Taylor and Philip Duffy demonstrate that the sunshade geoengineering scheme could slow down the global water cycle.

The sunshade schemes include placing reflectors in space, injecting sulfate or other reflective particles into the stratosphere, or enhancing the reflectivity of clouds by injecting cloud condensation nuclei in the troposphere. When CO2 is doubled as predicted in the future, a 2 percent reduction in sunlight is sufficient to counter the surface warming.

This new research investigated the sensitivity of the global mean precipitation to greenhouse and solar forcings separately to help understand the global water cycle in a geoengineered world.

While the surface temperature response is the same for CO2 and solar forcings, the rainfall response can be very different.

“We found that while climate sensitivity can be the same for different forcing mechanisms, the hydrological sensitivity is very different,” Bala said.

The global mean rainfall increased approximately 4 percent for a doubling of CO2 and decreases by 6 percent for a reduction in sunlight in his modeling study.

“Because the global water cycle is more sensitive to changes in solar radiation than to increases in CO2, geoengineering could lead to a decline in the intensity of the global water cycle” Bala said.

A recent study showed that there was a substantial decrease in rainfall over land and a record decrease in runoff and discharge into the ocean following the eruption of Mount Pinatubo in 1991. The ash emitted from Pinatubo masked some of the sunlight reaching the earth and therefore decreased surface temperatures slightly, but it also slowed down the global hydrologic cycle.

“Any research in geoengineering should explore the response of different components of the climate system to forcing mechanisms,” Bala said.

For instance, Bala said, sunshade geoengineering would not limit the amount of CO2 emissions. CO2 effects on ocean chemistry, specifically, could have harmful consequences for marine biota because of ocean acidification, which is not mitigated by geoengineering schemes.

“While geoengineering schemes would mitigate the surface warming, we still have to face the consequences of CO2 emissions on marine life, agriculture and the water cycle,” Bala said.

###

Founded in 1952, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is a national security laboratory, with a mission to ensure national security and apply science and technology to the important issues of our time. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is managed by Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC for the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration.


Anne Stark, DOE/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Quelle: EurekAlert!, http://www.eurekalert.org

Weitere Artikel in diesem BereichBewerten Sie diesen ArtikelToolbox
Organic corn: Increasing rotation complexity increases yields 
 "CRYO-BREHM" - eisiges Archiv der Wildtiere