Friday, April 25, 2008

North Pole could be ice free in 2008

You know when climate change is biting hard when instead of a vast expanse of snow the North Pole is a vast expanse of water. This year, for the first time, Arctic scientists are preparing for that possibility.

"The set-up for this summer is disturbing," says Mark Serreze, of the US National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC). A number of factors have this year led to most of the Arctic ice being thin and vulnerable as it enters its summer melting season.

In September 2007, Arctic sea ice reached a record low, opening up the fabled North-West passage that runs from Greenland to Alaska.

"There is this thin first-year ice even at the North Pole at the moment," says Serreze. "This raises the spectre – the possibility that you could become ice free at the North Pole this year."

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Tuesday, April 08, 2008

More Contrails

"March winds bring April jet contrails crisscrossing the sky, say meteorologists who have figured out where, when and why the sun-blocking, regionally climate-warming outbreaks happen across the United States.

By studying years of satellite views of contrail outbreaks and sorting out the conditions and the locales where they are most likely, the rhyme and reason of the human-made, high-altitude cirrus clouds are beginning to come into focus.

One of the least surprising discoveries is that the outbreaks tend to favor places with lots of air travel. But that alone does not explain why some days there are no contrails and on others, particularly days in April and October, the skies can be infested with the white lines."
clipped from dsc.discovery.com

March winds bring April jet contrails crisscrossing the sky, say meteorologists who have figured out where, when and why the sun-blocking, regionally climate-warming outbreaks happen across the United States.

By studying years of satellite views of contrail outbreaks and sorting out the conditions and the locales where they are most likely, the rhyme and reason of the human-made, high-altitude cirrus clouds are beginning to come into focus.

One of the least surprising discoveries is that the outbreaks tend to favor places with lots of air travel. But that alone does not explain why some days there are no contrails and on others, particularly days in April and October, the skies can be infested with the white lines.




April Skies

April Skies



clipped from dsc.discovery.com

"They tend to heat the upper troposphere more than they warm the surface," explained Patrick Minnis of NASA's Langley Research Center. "The debate now is whether the warming is larger than the albedo."

contrail forecasting tool
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