Scientists Say Cosmic Rays May Cause Global Warming 80
Saint Aardvark writes "Researchers in Israel and Germany suggest that variations in cosmic radiation as the sun orbits the galactic core may be responsible for changes in the Earth's climate -- including more than half of the change in the 20th century. A PDF of their article is available from GSA Today or read the abstract for their Physical Review Letters article."
Re:Cosmic rays? Give me a break (Score:4, Insightful)
ahhh. nothing like an open mind. (Score:5, Insightful)
And that, my friends, is Fascism.
BC
Re:ahhh. nothing like an open mind. (Score:1)
Re:ahhh. nothing like an open mind. (Score:2)
There were two scientists quoted from the article who were skeptical of the claim, and one who thought it was interesting. Given that this is one study, and the predicted results don't completely correlate to actual data the responses sound fairly run-of-the-mill for a new scientific claim.
Re:ahhh. nothing like an open mind. (Score:2)
All I was trying to get across in my post is that, as a species, we're doing a pretty darn good job of fucki
Re:Cosmic rays? Give me a break (Score:5, Insightful)
Um. Can't stop the problem if you don't understand the nature of it. So finding out if it is 'cosmic rays' or not will be more beneficial than finding a cure for flatulence.
Re:Cosmic rays? Give me a break (Score:2)
Regardless of if Co
Re:The cause is not known. (Score:1)
Re:Cosmic rays? Give me a break (Score:2)
so Venice has been sinking for decades? But in the 1970s, "scientists" feared global COOLING, an impending ice age. Did global cooling (at the time), cause the ice caps to melt and flood Vencie?
Junk Science (Score:2)
9,000 years ago, the place where my house sits was buried beneath 1,000 feet of ice.
Re:Cosmic rays? Give me a break (Score:1, Insightful)
You really might look these things up first. Carbon monoxide is partially responsible for smog. But please show me some reference to a peer reviewed study of carbon monoxide's role in the depletion of stratospheric ozone. Perhaps you were thinking of chlorine monoxide a biproduct of CFC/ozone reactions.
which is contributing.
Contributing to what? Skin cancer? Now, I think you must have been referring to the role of carbon
Re:Cosmic rays? Give me a break (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Cosmic rays? Give me a break (Score:1)
Re:Cosmic rays? Give me a break (Score:2)
Also, it could very well be a problem even if it is a nutral one. People living in low lying areas will be uprooted. Fire-ants and killer bees will spread, etc.
Once again (Score:5, Funny)
How this started (Score:2, Funny)
Haliburton is to blame, somehow.
something smells... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm just waiting for the antiscience republicans to jump on this. "See? Here's a study that says that cosmic rays cause climate change. Not greenhouse gases! See we were right to censor the EPA's report that global warming was primarly caused through human activity [abc.net.au]. Now let's continue with our report on how nicotine is not addictive [pbs.org], and creation science [icr.org] in our schools [msn.com]".
There was no censorship (Score:1, Interesting)
There was no censorship. A publisher using some self-restraint and standards in what they choose to publish is not censorship in any way. Since the EPA sections which were removed were bad, crackpot science, it is a good thing that the publisher of the report exercized a little editorial discretion.
"I'm just waiting for the antiscience republicans to jump on this."
How about the pro-science Re
Re:something smells... (Score:2)
(Note to Republican apologists: While certain aspects of Watts' statement might be chemically correct, they are of course misleading and irreleva
Re:Watt smells around here? (Score:2)
Re:Not nuclear winter (Score:2)
Re:something smells... (Score:2)
(Note to Republican apologists: While certain aspects of Watts' statement might be chemically correct, they are of course misleading and irrelevant
Re:something smells... (Score:2)
Re:something smells... (Score:1)
Not all pollution happens outdoors, alot of the time indoor air is worse than the outside and alot of that pollution is from spores and pollen.
Re:something smells... (Score:2)
I see (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I see (Score:1)
pro-do-whatever-serves-me-NOW-and-damn-the-
Re:I see (Score:2)
pro-do-whatever-serves-me-NOW-and-damn-the-
How is this any different from the Democrats?
Re:I see (Score:2)
The democrats aren't as good at fund-raising?
Re:something smells... (Score:2)
Well, that may be true; but, in the past 100 years there have been numerous distant super-nova. In the past 5 years, new emissions have been seen from the black hole at our galactic core, indicating that it may be becoming active again.
What I'm trying to say, is that it's not necessary that
Re:something smells... (Score:2)
You're missing a lot.
One is that the sun's own cycles modulate cosmic rays. We see a decrease in neutron detections during peaks of the solar cycle, for example. This is 11 years (22 total for full pole reversal and return).
Another thing is that comic ray levels don't smoothly mov
If you don't like PDF files (Score:5, Informative)
Just yesterday (Score:2, Interesting)
Just yesterday night I was watching this show on the Science channel [discovery.com]about the Stars [discovery.com].
They showed the interview of guy who went to space in Apollo mission. He talked about his experience with Cosmic rays. He was telling that if he closed his eyes, he could see fast flashes of light moving across. They didn't know what it was. Later they found out that it was Cosmic rays (high energy particles from a supernova explosion). When they looked at their helmets under magnification, they saw trails where the cosmic
Re:Just yesterday (Score:2)
It's called the Ionosphere, basically it is a layer of charged particles that deflect or absorb incoming charges.
Re:Just yesterday (Score:2)
On a more serious note, they estimate that the radiation exposure of a Mars mission will be equivalent to a lifetime of smoki
Re:Just yesterday (Score:2)
Re:Just yesterday (Score:2)
Re:Just yesterday (Score:1)
nobody knows (Score:3, Insightful)
Dagnabit! (Score:2)
[ Snide Mode On ] (Score:1)
Evr'yone knows that Kosimac rays don't cause global warming. Heat causes global warming!
So? (Score:3, Insightful)
"Cosmic rays [...] increase the number of charged particles in our atmosphere. There is some evidence that these may encourage low-level clouds to form, which cool the Earth."
First they take an unproven theory, that high-charged particles create low-level clouds, then they put another theory on top of it, that the fluctuations in high-charged particle concentrations, and the (unproven) low-level clouding, and that ALWAYS results in climatic cooling.
To construct this theory three techniques were used: "temperature, as inferred from ancient sediment records, carbon dioxide, as inferred from fossilized sea shells and cosmic rays, as inferred from meteorites."
"All three techniques are open to interpretation. Plus, geologists consider one of the 'cool' periods in the mathematical reconstruction to be a warm period, Olsen points out."
Cosmic rays resulting in a cloudier earth would be a far more appropriate Tag-line for the Article - since the mathematical model of temperature is at least in one part highly doubtful. Ah yeah and I won't even comment on the lurid slashdot headline which inspired all the trolls here.
Even if some of the global warming taking place today can be blamed on cosmic rays (or better the absence of them), so what? Should we just close our eyes, telling ourselves "hey its fate. its cosmic. I am just a puny earthling and I can do nothing about it." and lay waste to our planet with a clean conscience? hell, why not blame Canada?
Yes we do live in a complex environment. Blaming just one parameter for the fucked up outcome, although it probably didn't change much in the last billion years or so and not taking into account the new parameters (read: human influence) sounds pretty stupid to me.
So yes, I do think these theories are pretty interesting, the more of the process we understand the better, but they shouldn't be used as an excuse to act stupid or ruthless.
Re:So? (Score:2)
Ever hear of a cloud chamber? It works by looking at the condensation trails that form as charged particles move through a water vapor. Charles Wilson won the nobel prize for its invention.
From http://www.nobel.se/physics/education
Re:So? (Score:2)
The "so what" is "so we shouldn't look to curbing greenhouse emissions to supress global warming." Making regulatory controls to dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emiss
Uhhh... looking for funds? (Score:2)
Just because its cosmic, doesn't mean it's not.... (Score:2)
Even if global warming is natural - either through cosmic rays or volcanoes or cow flatulance, it is irrelevant to the problem at hand. We should always strive to not contribute (read: accelerate) the problem, and we should even work against it in some respects.
Global warming whether natural or man-made is a concern for all of us. We KNOW it is happening and we know WHY and HOW. We can't yet acertain WHO is repsonble and to what extent. We are still figuring that out. But we also do know that
Re:Just because its cosmic, doesn't mean it's not. (Score:2)
You have a lot more confidence in what a lot of greens (who ignore other science at their whim) are screaming than I do. I will concur that we know that it is happening, but we hardly know WHY and HOW. Hell, these same greens were screaming that we were creating another ice age back in the 1970's, so I fail to see how they have much credibility. Not only do we know now WHY and HOW definitively, we
Re:Just because its cosmic, doesn't mean it's not. (Score:1)
Preview and preview, and STILL I mistype. "Not only do we NOT KNOW WHY and HOW definitively...."
Re:Just because its cosmic, doesn't mean it's not. (Score:2)
But getting back to what I said before, we should endeaver to minimize our impact in all ways.
A little common sense shows that this is obvious (Score:2, Interesting)
The ozone layer is there to protect us from this cosmic radiation (or cosmic rays as they call them in the articl, I wonder if there're any cosmic freds or cosmic mikes?). When we release toxic chemicals into the atmosphere we deplete the ozone layer. That makes it possible for this cosmic radiation to get through our atmosphere. This leads to global warming, and the increased cancer that seems to mildly correlate over the past half century to one century. Don
Re:A little common sense shows that this is obviou (Score:1)
*sigh* it's easy to get facts confused, especially in such a sticky field as Global Warm/Cooling, but it's fatal to do it on /. ;->
Re:A little common sense shows that this is obviou (Score:1)
Anybody else read the title as: (Score:1)
Or was is just me?
Evil pixies (Score:3, Interesting)
Whether fossil fuel emissions or cosmic rays or evil pixies are causing global warming, our cities are still enshrouded in horrible choking smog. Thus, I think we should ease up on the fossil fuels and pursue hyrdrogen or fusion or solar or whatever. If it has a positive effect on global warming, great. If not, at least we will be able to breathe clean air while we ponder how to defeat the cosmic rays / evil pixies.
Re:Evil pixies (Score:1)
Re:Evil pixies (Score:1)
Maybe we chain the pixies to exercise bikes or something.
Solar System Warming (Score:1)
Earth isn't the only planet in our solar system to be warming up right now.
Mars is warming
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/scitech/D a ilyNews/m ars011207.html
Neptune's moon Triton is warming
http://www.astro.up.pt/nd/astro_news/98/u k98-7.1.h tml
Pluto may be warming
http://www.cnn.com/2002/TECH/space/08/19/ pluto.war ming/
And there is good evidence that the Sun'
Save the environment... (Score:1)