Saturday, April 28, 2012
"Warming hole" delayed climate change over eastern United States
Harvard University: Climate scientists at the Harvard School
of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have discovered that particulate
pollution in the late 20th century created a "warming hole" over the
eastern United States—that is, a cold patch where the effects of global warming
were temporarily obscured.
While greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and methane warm
the Earth's surface, tiny particles in the air can have the reverse effect on
regional scales. "What we've shown is that particulate pollution over the
eastern United States has delayed the warming that we would expect to see from
increasing greenhouse gases," says lead author Eric Leibensperger (Ph.D.
'11), who completed the work as a graduate student in applied physics at SEAS.
"For the sake of protecting human health and reducing
acid rain, we've now cut the emissions that lead to particulate
pollution," he adds, "but these cuts have caused the greenhouse
warming in this region to ramp up to match the global trend." At this
point, most of the "catch-up" warming has already occurred.
The findings, published in the journal Atmospheric Chemistry
and Physics, present a more complete picture of the processes that affect
regional climate change. The work also carries significant implications for the
future climate of industrial nations, like China, that have not yet implemented
air quality regulations to the same extent as the United States.
Until the United States passed the Clean Air Act in 1970 and
strengthened it in 1990, particulate pollution hung thick over the central and
eastern states. Most of these particles in the atmosphere were made of sulfate,
originating as sulfur emissions from coal-fired power plants. Compared to
greenhouse gases, particulate pollution has a very short lifetime (about 1
week), so its distribution over the Earth is uneven....
Observed change in surface air temperature between 1930 and
1990. Observations are from the NASA GISS Surface Temperature Analysis. Image
courtesy of Eric Leibensperger, from the Harvard website
Labels:
aerosols,
atmosphere,
science,
temperature,
US
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment