Global Dimming - Nova program

Laika

Electoral Member
Apr 22, 2005
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Where The Wild Things Are
There was an interesting program on Nova last week about global warming and the effect that greenhouse gases have on the amount of sunlight reaching the surface of the planet.

TV Program Description

"Dimming the Sun" investigates the discovery that the sunlight reaching Earth has been growing dimmer, which may seem surprising given all the international concern over global warming. At first glance, less sunlight might hardly seem to matter when our planet is stewing in greenhouse gases. But the discovery of global dimming has led several scientists to revise their models of the climate and how fast it's changing. According to one recent and highly controversial model, the worst-case warming scenario could be worse than anyone has predicted. "Dimming the Sun" unravels this baffling climate conundrum and the implications for Earth's future.

To find out what global dimming means for the fate of the planet, NOVA reports on the findings of the world's top climate detectives, including an American scientist who found a grim but crucial opportunity immediately following September 11, 2001, when the entire U.S. airline fleet was grounded for three days. This presented a unique opportunity to study the effects of airplane vapor trails on the atmosphere (see The Contrail Effect). Comparing changes in the daily temperature range showed that the absence of dimming from aircraft pollution alone made a marked difference to the temperature. This result hints at how much the effects of atmospheric pollution had been underestimated.

Working in Israel, Dr. Gerald Stanhill was one of the first to discover the surprising fact that less solar energy is reaching the Earth's surface. While his measurements were met with skepticism, a review of worldwide data by Stanhill and a German researcher demonstrated that during the 1980s and early '90s, sunlight reaching Earth's surface had dropped just about everywhere. Halfway around the world, independent studies by Australian scientists confirmed this disturbing diagnosis. (For more, see Discoveries in Global Dimming.)

Scientists have long known that increasing air pollution—the smog that clouds urban skies—endangers our respiratory health. But they had underestimated the impact of pollution on the amount of sunlight reaching Earth. Some scientists now believe that global dimming may also disturb rainfall patterns such as the Asian monsoon. If they are right, global dimming may be one of many factors that contributed to severe droughts and famines in Africa during the 1980s.

The good news is that pollution controls have slowed and possibly even halted global dimming during the last decade. The bad news—and the ironic twist in NOVA's story—is that without pollution, more sunlight is reaching Earth, revealing the full impact of global warming. Although all climate models have important uncertainties, the unsettling implication is that, with dimming fading away in many regions, global temperatures may rise even faster than most models have predicted.

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sun/

I have to say that this show made for some very thought-provoking television (and how often can you say that!?).

Did anyone else happen to catch this? If so, I would be interested in hearing what others thought.
 

FiveParadox

Governor General
Dec 20, 2005
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Vancouver, BC
Re: Global Dimming — Nova program

I hadn't seen that program; thank you, Laika, for the interesting thread post.

I would suggest that this program has indicated that we need to search for some way to correct the climate change phenomenon, while ensuring that we do so in a way which would not present the creatures of Earth with the risk of dangerous amounts of exposure to the more dangerous types of energies of the sun. It would appear that perhaps, during this process, we could be required to keep one or two types of pollution "strong", in terms of their presence in the atmosphere, while we attempt to correct climate change, at which point we can begin to phase out that "pollutant shield".
 

Laika

Electoral Member
Apr 22, 2005
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Where The Wild Things Are
RE: Global Dimming - Nova

The one thing that came to my mind was how it seemed to fit the little bits of information that has surfaced over the years that all seemed to be pointing to some major global event, but one that was not immediately apparent to us.

Things like the fact that animals are starting to move further north from their traditional territories, freaky weather patterns, melting glaciers...it all seemed to be part of a larger mechanism, and that we weren't really seeing the whole picture.
 

Mulder

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Mar 9, 2006
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www.canadianweather.org
Hi Laika,

Thanks for this post and the link, if you are looking for more info on this check these out, this is very interesting stuff:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/feature/story/0,13026,1108853,00.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/programmes/horizon/dimming_trans.shtml
http://www.canadianweather.org/forums/index.php?showtopic=1287

This really is an under talked about climate phenomenon, here is a snippet about global dimming in relation to global warming. If it all seems a little overwealming (sp?), that's because it is. There is so much about our climate going on it really is hard to know what will happen in the future.

Relationship to global warming
Some scientists now consider that the effects of global dimming have masked the effect of global warming, and that resolving global dimming may therefore have a major and previously unpredicted impact on temperatures and sea levels. Initial work to incorporate the effects of global dimming suggest that world temperatures may rise by 2 °C by 2030, and as much as 10 °C by 2100; this is a doubling of the widely accepted figure of a 5 °C rise in global temperature this Century. If this were to be so, such large increases would lead to the melting of the Greenland icecap, major reductions in the extent of tropical rainforests, and significant rises in sea levels.