News from Spaceship Earth (4/15 to 4/21, 2001)

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Dust Storm Spreads Across West

By ROBERT WELLER Associated Press Writer

DENVER (AP) — A dust storm that started in Mongolia and picked up industrial pollution from China has spread a haze across a quarter of the mainland United States, experts said Tuesday.

The whitish haze has been seen from Calgary, Alberta, to Arizona to Aspen, where weekend levels of particulate — matter that reduces visibility and can cause respiratory problems — quadrupled from the previous weekend.

Gene Feldman, an oceanographer from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., said aircraft have been monitoring matter in the dust clouds.

``At one time, this dust cloud was bigger than Japan,'' he said.

Russ Schnell, director of observatory operations for National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Boulder, said the cloud will reach the East Coast, but should dissipate in the next several days.

In late 1998, scientists claimed to have documented the spread of industrial pollution from China to the United States, where it caused pollution levels as high as two-thirds of federal health limits.

``This storm is a godsend to pollution researchers,'' Schnell said. ``People are finally realizing that what have been saying for years is true. Pollution from Asia is being carried across the oceans.''

The two experts said it was unusual for such matter to be so visible to the naked eye. In Aspen, particulate levels measured 58 millionths of a gram per cubic meter of air, compared with 14 millionths of a gram a week earlier.

``We had the same kind of haze when Mount St. Helen's erupted but the particulate didn't come down to the ground level as much,'' said Lee Cassin, director of Aspen's environmental health department.

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http://news.excite.com/news/ap/010417/15/earthshine

Earth Glow Used To Monitor Climate

Updated 3:32 PM ET April 17, 2001

By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - Scientists are using our planet's ghostly reflection on the dark moon to help monitor climate.

The glow, known as earthshine, helps researchers measure how much sunlight the Earth is reflecting, an important factor in determining global change.

During a crescent moon, earthshine can be viewed with the naked eye, looking at the shaded portion of the moon. Leonardo da Vinci first explained the phenomenon, in which the moon acts as a giant mirror, showing the sunlight reflected from Earth.

Scientists from the New Jersey Institute of Technology and the California Institute of Technology report in the May 1 issue of Geophysical Research Letters that they used earthshine to measure the Earth's reflectance. They concluded that the fraction of sunlight the planet reflects is currently 29.7 percent.

"Earth's climate is driven by the net sunlight that it absorbs," says Philip R. Goode, leader of the New Jersey Institute of Technology team.

"We have found surprisingly large - up to 20 percent - seasonal variations in Earth's reflectance," he said.

If Earth reflected even one percent less light on average, the effect could be significant enough to be a concern with regard to global warming, the scientists said. Less light reflected could mean more absorbed on Earth, resulting in warmer temperatures.

In the early 20th century, the French astronomer Andre-Louis Danjon undertook the first quantitative observations of earthshine. But the method lay dormant for nearly 50 years, until Caltech professor Steven E. Koonin described its potential in a 1991 paper.

The new measurements are based on about 200 nights of observations of the shaded area of the moon at regular intervals over a recent two-year period, and another 70 nights during 1994-95.

The study relies on averages over long periods, because the reflectance changes substantially from night to night with changing weather, and even more dramatically from season to season with changing snow and ice cover.

The data suggest that the reflectance has decreased slightly during the past five years, as the Sun's magnetic activity has climbed from solar minimum to maximum during that time.

Many scientists have noted changes in climate that seem to mimic the 11-year solar cycle and this research could support the theory that the sun's magnetic field plays an indirect role in Earth's climate.

-- Anonymous, April 18, 2001

Answers

Politics as usual! How timely to have something else to stir up anti- China sentiment. You don't hear of the U.S. pollution that only has to travel half the distance across the Atlantic to reach Europe.

-- Anonymous, April 18, 2001

Good point, David - thanks for pointing it out. I hadn't even thought of that angle when I posted it.

The article for me showed perfectly how we live on a finite sphere - where something happening at one point on the globe can have an impact (at minimum) half a world away. An intricate web, indeed.

-- Anonymous, April 18, 2001


Thanks Jim for posting this. I'm always interested in what's going on on the planet. A good example of how we're all connected.

-- Anonymous, April 19, 2001

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