
Scientists to track impact of Asian dust and pollution on clouds, weather ...
Date: Wednesday, April 18, 2007 @ 22:16:24 UTC Topic: Science
 Scientists using the nation's newest and most capable aircraft for
environmental research 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 playing
a role in global climate.
The PACDEX (Pacific Dust Experiment) project will be led by scientists
at the National Center for Atmospheric Research and Scripps Institution
of Oceanography. NCAR's main sponsor, the National Science Foundation
(NSF), will provide most of the funding. The first mission will be
launched in late April, with the exact start date dependent on weather
patterns in Asia. The project will continue for almost two months.
Impacts on climate change and weather
While many particles in the plumes, such as sulfates, cool the
planet by blocking solar radiation from reaching Earth, other
particles, such as black carbon, can have a warming effect. Black
carbon produces warming by absorbing sunlight both at ground level,
where the particles are deposited on snow cover, and in the air, where
sunlight otherwise would have been reflected back into space.
Particles may mask up to half of the global warming impact of
greenhouse gases. Warming in the coming decades will be strongly
influenced by how particle emissions change, particularly in Asia.
The plumes can also alter global temperatures by interacting with
large-scale, midlatitude cloud systems over the Pacific that reflect
enormous amounts of sunlight and help regulate global climate. The
plumes may affect regional precipitation patterns because water vapor
molecules adhere to microscopic dust and pollution particles 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.
"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 Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
"It will also help us examine how the dust and soot modify 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."
Japan to North America
As Asia's economies boom, scientists are increasingly turning their
attention to the plumes, which pack a combination of industrial
emissions (including soot, smog, and trace metals) and dust. The plumes
are lofted by storms that originate in regions such as Central Asia's
Gobi Desert.
To study changes in the plumes as they move through the atmosphere
from Japan to the western United States, the PACDEX team will deploy
the NSF/NCAR Gulfstream-V aircraft. This newly configured jet has a
range of about 6,000 miles and can cruise at altitudes from just a few
hundred feet above Earth's surface to over 50,000 feet, enabling
scientists to study the plumes across thousands of miles and at
different levels of the atmosphere. The Gulfstream-V will carry an
array of instruments that will enable scientists to both collect data
on clouds and to bring dust, pollutants, and cloud particles into the
aircraft for study.
Source: National Center for Atmospheric Research Via: http://www.physorg.com/news96123222.html
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