Download The CLOUD Experiment at CERN

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

German Climate Action Plan 2050 wikipedia , lookup

Soon and Baliunas controversy wikipedia , lookup

Economics of global warming wikipedia , lookup

Instrumental temperature record wikipedia , lookup

Michael E. Mann wikipedia , lookup

Global warming controversy wikipedia , lookup

Climate change adaptation wikipedia , lookup

Heaven and Earth (book) wikipedia , lookup

Climate change denial wikipedia , lookup

Climatic Research Unit documents wikipedia , lookup

Climate change and agriculture wikipedia , lookup

Climate change in Tuvalu wikipedia , lookup

Mitigation of global warming in Australia wikipedia , lookup

Citizens' Climate Lobby wikipedia , lookup

Climate governance wikipedia , lookup

Global warming wikipedia , lookup

Fred Singer wikipedia , lookup

General circulation model wikipedia , lookup

Climate change feedback wikipedia , lookup

Climate sensitivity wikipedia , lookup

Effects of global warming on humans wikipedia , lookup

Media coverage of global warming wikipedia , lookup

Politics of global warming wikipedia , lookup

Public opinion on global warming wikipedia , lookup

Climate change in the United States wikipedia , lookup

Climate engineering wikipedia , lookup

Effects of global warming on Australia wikipedia , lookup

Climate change and poverty wikipedia , lookup

Climate change, industry and society wikipedia , lookup

Scientific opinion on climate change wikipedia , lookup

Years of Living Dangerously wikipedia , lookup

IPCC Fourth Assessment Report wikipedia , lookup

Attribution of recent climate change wikipedia , lookup

Surveys of scientists' views on climate change wikipedia , lookup

Solar radiation management wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
The CLOUD Experiment at CERN
Jasper Kirkby /CERN
Bulgarian teachers visit
16 October 2008
1
Climate forcings
•
•
0.7oC rise since 1900 (not uniform)
IPCC findings:
‣
Total anthropogenic 1.6 W/m2
‣
Negligible natural (solar)
contribution: 0.12 W/m2
‣
Clouds poorly understood
2
Earth’s radiation energy budget
•
•
•
Atmosphere contains “greenhouse gases” which absorb longwave (infrared)
radiation
Most important greenhouse gases are H2O (95% of greenhouse effect) and
CO2 (4%)
Most (2/3) of energy reaching Earth’s surface is radiation back from
atmosphere (“greenhouse effect”) 3
NASA CERES satellite
•
•
•
Data from CERES satellite (Clouds and Earth’s Radiant Energy
System)
Climate models aim to simulate Earth’s climate on computers
Clouds are poorly simulated 4
Why clouds areJohnimportant
for
climate
change
Constable, Cloud study,
1821
•
•
•
5
Clouds cover
~65% of globe,
annual average
Net cooling of
30 W/m2
c.f. 1.6 W/m2
total
anthropogenic
•
•
•
All cloud droplets form on aerosol “seeds” known
as cloud condensation nuclei - CCN
Cloud properties are sensitive to number of
droplets
More aerosols/CCN
=> brighter clouds, with longer lifetimes
6
Seeds for cloud formation
contrails
ship tracks
• Aerosol particles = condensation seeds
• Charged particles = condensation seeds
(at high supersaturations)
• Can cosmic rays
influence aerosols,
clouds and climate?
bubble chamber
7
Little Ice Age and the sunspot record
The frozen Thames,
1677
•
•
Inactive sun (low sunspots) ⇒ cold
climate
Active sun (high sunspots) ⇒ warm
climate
8
Possible physical mechanism
9
Galactic Cosmic Rays (GCRs)
•
•
•
•
Generated by supernovae
Enter our solar system and
are partially deflected by solar
wind
Mostly high energy protons
Tiny energy input (= starlight)
10
Sun (photosphere) seen in visible (677nm) at solar max
(2001)
11
Sun (corona) seen with extreme UV eyes
(20nm)
12
GCR-climate - 2000yr
•
•
Little Ice Age and
Medieval Warm Period
Global observations
high GCR flux
cool climate
low GCR flux
warm climate
Austrian speleothem:
13
GCR-climate - 10 kyr (Holocene)
Bond et al, Science 294, 2001
• LIA is merely the most recent of around 10 such events in
Holocene
14
GCRs and Indian Ocean monsoon
• Solar/GCR forcing of Indian
Ocean monsoons (ITCZ
migration) on centennial—
even decadel—timescales
15
CLOUD EXPERIMENT
16
CLOUD Collaboration
17
CLOUD concept
•
Study cosmic ray - aerosol - cloud microphysical interactions
in the laboratory:
‣ Recreate atmosphere in aerosol chamber
‣ Attach analysing instruments to measure aerosols + cloud
droplets
‣ Use CERN particle beam as adjustable source of “cosmic
rays”
18
CLOUD facility at CERN PS (2009 →)
19
CLOUD 3m aerosol chamber
•
•
•
•
•
•
Stainless steel chamber, 3m diameter,
3.8m height
Ports for sampling probes, optical
readout & instrumentation
Thermal housing and precision
temperature control
Operation range:
1.0 → 1.1 bar absolute
-90oC → 100oC
CERN UHV standard for inner surfaces
Air supply from cryogenic liquids
20
•
•
CLOUD experimental goals
Influence of cosmic rays on:
‣ Aerosol nucleation and growth:
 Ion induced nucleation of aerosols from trace
gases
 Aerosol growth to cloud condensation nuclei
(CCN)
 Activation of CCN into cloud droplets
‣ Cloud microphysics (global electrical circuit):
 Ice particle formation
 Collision efficiencies of aerosols and droplets
 Freezing mechanism of polar stratospheric
clouds
Evaluate climatic significance of laboratory
measurements by cloud modeling and field studies
21
Conclusions
•
•
•
•
Climate has continually varied in the past, and the
causes are not well understood - especially on the
100 year timescale relevant for today’s climate
change
Strong evidence for solar-climate variability, but
mechanism is not understood. A cosmic ray
influence on clouds is a leading candidate
CLOUD at CERN aims to study the cosmic ray-cloud
mechanisms in a controlled laboratory experiment
The question of whether - and to what extent - the
climate is influenced by solar/cosmic ray variability
remains central to our understanding of
anthropogenic climate change
22
Messages to take back to your classroom
•
•
•
Always be sceptical of what you read or hear in
science (including what you heard in my talk!):
‣ Especially in the popular media, which is often
sensationalist and wrong when it comes to science
This doesn’t mean you doubt everything you hear; it
means you decide for yourself if it makes sense, and
you always think about alternative explanations:
‣ To help you, there is an enormous amount very
good (and bad) information available on the web
Science is never “settled” - it always has
uncertainties, and this is its strength: the current
orthodoxy can always be thrown out by new
experimental results
23
Two quotations for your students
•
•
“In questions of science, the
authority of a thousand is not
worth the humble reasoning of a
single individual”, Galileo
Galilei, 1632
"The first principle of science is
that you must not fool yourself,
and you are the easiest person
to fool", Richard Feynman,
1964
24
Some (good) scientific climate blogs &
debates
•
•
•
Anthropogenic global warming viewpoint:
‣ RealClimate: http://www.realclimate.org/
Sceptical viewpoint:
‣ Climate Science (Roger Pielke Sr.): http://climatesci.org/
‣ Climate Audit (Steve McIntyre): http://www.climateaudit.org/
Lots of interactive climate plots:
‣ Climate4You (Ole Humlum): http://www.climate4you.com/
‣ WoodforTrees (Paul Clark): http://www.woodfortrees.org/
25