| May
5, 2005
Scientists Call For Research Aimed At
Better Understanding Earth's Energy 'Balance'
Projects such as Deep Space Climate
Observatory would retrieve vital information
By Mario Aguilera
In an article
in this week's issue of Science, three leading climate
and atmospheric scientists argue that scientific research is
lacking in several core areas concerning Earth's climate and
its fundamental energy system.
In a "Perspectives"
article in the journal, the scientists say that a significant
gap exists in accounting for the amount of the sun's energy
that is absorbed by Earth's atmosphere and surface and the amount
reflected back into space.
Such information about
this "energy balance" is vital, the authors say, for
accurately determining how Earth's climate and temperature is
changing, factors that can influence a host of important processes
and patterns such as weather, sea level and precipitation, and
for gaining a clear understanding of how human-produced changes
are impacting climate. The authors are Robert J. Charlson of
the University of Washington, Francisco P. J. Valero of Scripps
Institution of Oceanography at the University of California,
San Diego, and John H. Seinfeld at the California Institute
of Technology's Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering.
The authors call for
more and better research observations and models that describe
the overall energy balance of Earth's system.
"If we want to
contribute to the well being of humanity and to enhance its
ability to live in harmony with the environment, it is essential
that we gain the needed observational and theoretical knowledge
that will permit the accurate description of the Earth system
and its evolution," said Valero, a research scientist at
Scripps Institution.
Valero is the lead
scientist of the Deep Space Climate Observatory, designed to
place a satellite into orbit around the sun approximately one
million miles from Earth. At this point, the sun and Earth's
gravitational pull on the satellite combine in a way that allows
the satellite to orbit the sun in the same time as Earth does,
and thus have its advanced albedo (reflectivity) sensors aimed
at Earth's sunlit side all the time. The satellite was to have
been launched aboard the space shuttle by December 2000, but
remains on hold while waiting for a new launch date.
Life and most natural
processes on our planet are driven almost entirely by energy
arriving at Earth from space, essentially in the form of radiation
from the sun. This energy is partly reflected back to space
and partly absorbed by Earth's atmosphere and surface. The absorbed
portion is utilized to drive the atmosphere, the oceans, climate
and life itself and is finally re-radiated back to space in
the form of infrared (heat) radiation.
If the solar energy
absorbed by the Earth system equals the infrared energy radiated
back to space, the system is in "balance" and there
is no "heating" or "cooling" of Earth.
But to better understand
and characterize the complex interactions of Earth's systems-and
to be able to forecast its future evolution-it is imperative
to find accurate answers to the fundamental scientific questions
that involve the balance between the absorbed solar radiation
and the radiated infrared radiation, says Valero. Such balance
is affected by natural and human-made changes that affect the
interactions of radiation (solar and infrared) with greenhouse
gases, aerosols and clouds, including the effects of greenhouse
gases and aerosols on clouds and the atmosphere.
In the Perspectives
article, the authors point out the importance of accurate observations
of Earth albedo as well as the need for the development of a
strategy that facilitates research involving the interaction
of radiation (both solar and infrared) with gases, aerosols
and clouds.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624
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