Articlexpo
Search:    Main :> About Us :> Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Add Url :> Submit Article   
 

Mirror Telescopes

Mirror telescopes are those telescopes that utilize mirrors to bring the image to your eye. Do you l ... - Jennifer Bailey
 

Ball Bearings Are Flat ?C Another Myth Crushed

Ball bearings aren't balls. This is a humorous account of what ball bearings really are. - amabaie
 

On the Shelf (continued) 13 Outsize Volumes

It occurred to me, while composing my previous missive, that undertaking to record every book in my ... - Howard Lewis
 
 

Para Trooper Gliders With Angle of Attack Motor or Crank

Have you considered incorporating a Troop Glider into your computer games recently? - Lance Winslow
 

CCTV Decoy Registration System

Avoiding cameras? Gotcha, what are you trying to hide from. Cameras in Subways and airports often do ... - Lance Winslow
 

Artificial Intelligence - What Have We Learned Through Natural Ignorance?

During the late ?s and early ?s, I had the opportunity to work with expert systems in real-time prod ... - Edward Toupin
 

What Service Do You Need to Make your Book Sell?

Whether you are just starting or almost finished with your print or eBook, you wonder, "What step to ... - Judy Cullins
 

Achieving an Ambidextrous Mindset

"...Some of us may have heard that we're 'right-brained' or maybe we lean more toward the 'left-brai ... - C. Bailey-Lloyd
 
 

Main » Education & Learning » Pure Sciences
 

A New Science for a New Climate

 
Author: Jacob Fiennes
 

At first glance its hard to imagine how the proliferation of human activity upon the environment has been a major factor in climate change given that climate change alone is nothing new. Over two million years the earths history has seen enormous changes. Indeed, in the last ten thousand years the warming and cooling of the earth has been on a larger scale that what we see today.

The climate is however very changeable these days. Getting the politics right has been half the fight. Unfortunately, the right policy has been held at bay partially by having the right knowledge of whats happening to the climate. The climate changes we see today are the result of only a century and a half of study, peanuts in comparison the huge shifts over the earths history.

The recent UN Climate Change Conference sought to put in place a policy to take over the Kyoto protocol. At its core were some recently publicised results:

1. The warming trend on the earths surface has been taking place since the early part of the twentieth century. The last ten years have been the warmest of that millennium.

2. There have been rapid signs of melting the Arctic circle. The sea ice there has fallen by around eight percent over thirty years.

3. The old inconsistency in the data between the temperature rise in the atmosphere and on the planets surface seems to have levelled out. They appear to rise in parallel.

4. The Scripps Institute of Oceanography in California noted that the ocean has been warming at different depths for over 65 years. These results match the predictions that warming has been induced more by greenhouse gases that as a result of small changes in the suns heat output.

5. There has been an observed and recorded link between the sea surface temperature and the frequency and intensity of tropical storms, typhoons and hurricanes.

6. The existing computer models of the change in ocean currents, in particular in the North Atlantic, are correct.

There are however still some unknowns. For example the solar hypothesis is now known to be a lesser contributor, the miniscule changes in the suns heat output over its eleven year sunspot cycle is adding to the mix. Also, the aerosol emissions from sulphurous fuel promote the formation of clouds, and as a consequence the sunlight reflected from the earths surface increases, effectively opposing the greenhouse gas effect.

Some even argue for the benefits of global warming, which include for example the opening up of new shipping lanes in the artic as the ice recedes, new oil drilling opportunities and longer harvest periods in Canada and Russia.

It seems climate change is inevitable and the small economic ideas such as banning coal subsidies bear little fruit as a means of curbing the problem. More than ever, political will must be demonstrated at first to show to industry and populations that it is even an issue. More importantly perhaps, the will of the politicians must be met with achievable methods from the technological and scientific community.

Professor Socolow is leading the way with what he calls stabilisation wedges. On a graph of climate change, the space between the trend line and the stability line is known as the stabilisation triangle. By dividing these triangles into wedges and assigning realistic goals to each wedge the massive problem is given a usable and effective solution.

The goals to assign to the wedges range from greater overall efficiencies, the decarbonisation of electricity, fuel displacement by low carbon electricity, methane management, and natural carbon sinks. By further subdividing each wedge into sub wedges, such as decarbonised electricity being subdivided into nuclear power, renewable energy, natural gas as an alternative to coal, and the storage of carbon dioxide these problems are confounded into what everyone has been looking for. A short list of solutions that together will balance the problem.

It seems the technology for all this exists. It is merely in need of refinement. For example the management of carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels could be dealt with through further carbon sequestration. A couple of power plants already employ this particular technique to good effect. The carbon dioxide is extracted at the source and is injected into porous rocks deep underground to prevent it escaping into the atmosphere.

Steam reformation is another technique. It is, in essence, a pre-emptive technique that reacts the fuel used with water to yield hydrogen. The hydrogen output is burnt to create electricity.

Of all the possibilities of reworking and inventing technologies, perhaps the best idea is the oldest idea. Replanting programmes. The idea of photosynthesis to combine carbon dioxide with water and sunlight is a relatively cheap and exponential idea and would be hugely effective.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Exam Results - Ten Stupid Things People Do to Trash Theirs - And How to Fix It
 
Professional Speaking for Extra Income
 
Response of the News and Understanding the Feelings Sexual Abuse Brings
 
Views of Women in Pride and Prejudice
 
Graduation Tests: States Require School Curriculums to Show Results Through Testing
 
Interview for "A Circle of Dreams" Author Annie Rogers
 
Interview with Molly Bruce Jacobs, Author of "Secret Girl"
 
Scientific Snake Oil
 
Who Can Apply For Online Nursing Degrees?
 
School Based Mental Health Services Reduce School Violence
 
 
 
Add URL
 
 

Teens & Children

 

Food & Recipe

 

Automobiles

 

Adventure & Sports

 

Society & Communities

 

Hotels & Travel

 

Science & Research

 

Computers & Networking

 

Self Help

 

Government & Politics

 

Employment & Careers

 

Music & Entertainment

 

Shopping Online

 

Culture & Art

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Events & News

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Business & Commerce

 

Family & Home

 

Estate & Realty

 

Banking & Finance

 

Education & Learning

 

Online & Indoor Games

 

Fitness & Health


 
Main :> Privacy :> Terms of Use  
Copyright © 2008 www.articlexpo.com