NASA Snaps Mysterious "Night-Shining" Clouds 198
coondoggie writes to tell us that NASA has captured some pretty impressive images of the Alluring noctilucent (or "night-shining") clouds. These clouds are made up of ice crystals and dust and are formed at high altitudes near the poles. "Very little is known about how these clouds form over the poles, why they are being seen more frequently and at lower latitudes than ever before, or why they have been growing brighter. AIM will observe two complete cloud seasons over both poles, documenting an entire life cycle of the shiny clouds for the first time. 'It is clear that these clouds are changing, a sign that a part of our atmosphere is changing and we do not understand how, why or what it means,' stated AIM principal investigator James Russell III of Hampton University, Hampton, Va. 'These observations suggest a connection with global change in the lower atmosphere and could represent an early warning that our Earth environment is being changed.'"
"steamed hams"? (Score:5, Funny)
At this time of day? localized entirely in your kitchen?
Off topic? Dumb mods (Score:2, Informative)
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Parent still made me grin though =D
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No, that's Al Gore's job. Now you're going to have to take away his Nobel prize and give to the clouds. :)
Re:"steamed hams"? (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, I understand that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, but do we really need to wait until the house burns to the ground before we'll agree that the bitch is on fire? Isn't the smoke rising through the floorboards enough? It's amazing the number the oil companies and the right-wing media have done on us. Every other developed country in the world is at least sitting down and agreeing to try to minimize carbon emissions except the US. And we act all shocked and hurt when the rest of the world thinks we're total assholes.
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The american problem is that they are governed by people who have a personnal interest in keeping their country in a high oil dependance.
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As someone brighter than I first said: when someone's income depends on not understanding your argument, it's incredibly difficult to convince that person that you're right. The USA is the leading consumer of energy in the world, and is, per capita, the leading producer of greenhouse pollutants. Is it really amazin
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Let's not bring Intelligent Design into this.
In this case, I don't have to just rely on the "tes
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Real science is actually "un-smearable" really, it's impossible for a logical being to argue things learned by real science. (We're not logical beings though, but that's a topic for another day. We're primarily emotional beings with just enough logic to hopefully adapt and learn quickly enough that we don't become extinct, each time our species is threatened with extinction.)
Yo
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Heh... (Score:5, Insightful)
That may well be entirely true, but I recognize a cousin to the "...and therefore may lead to new treatments for cancer." that molecular biologists ritualistically slap at the end of every grant application.
It's all about knowing how to get the dollars (Score:3, Insightful)
Same shit with terrorism in other areas. Can't get money for an anti-crime initiative? Just make it an anti-terror initiative! You get money t
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You could have at least changed owls for something different.
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Maybe the cloud is part of a positive feedback cycle that keeps the Earth's climate in acceptable ranges. Probably not, but since we're all jumping to conclusions here...
Re:Heh... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Heh... (Score:5, Insightful)
First, Global Warming is passe, try Global Climate Change. That's a better term for your crowd because when it snows in April you can relate it to Global Climate Change. It has the added benefit of being completely true since no one is going to argue for Global Climate Stasis.
Second, science is about confirming links, obvious (to you) or not. Not that this study is going to actual confirm anything. Studying something for 2 years will not allow them or you or anyone to draw any conclusions about whether Global Climate Change is the cause.
Third, the conclusion that this is a new phenomenon is on shaky ground. Same can be said for the ozone hole. A better label would be a phenomenon we've never noticed before. I'm sure one of Newton's contemporaries probably labeled gravity as a new phenomenon, as if everyone was floating around in zero G before the apple fell on Wayne's head.
Never noticed before? (Score:2)
I think people underestimate the level of science that was performed then. I'm quite confident that stargazers of the time would indeed notice something new and unseen.
Now it's possible they've appeared in the distant past, gone away and come back, but that's a different story
Re:Heh... (Score:5, Insightful)
The "Climate Crisis" interpretation is that, due to the sudden rise of atmospheric carbon, we're in danger of not just a few degrees of warmth or sea level jumping a hundred feet, but a cascading series of feedback loops that will render Earth wholly uninhabitable.
We know the temperature is going up. We know that carbon in the air is going up. We know that we're tossing an awful lot of carbon into the air We can see a clear correlation between temperature and carbon going back a few thousand years.
Don't YOU think that's enough to, I don't know, stop tossing carbon into the air and see what happens? If it turns out to do nothing, we can just let you burn dinosaurs again. I know I'd rather lose my next paycheck than die.
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Well, that makes the flawed assumption that the earth's climate behaviors linearly and predictibly. It doesn't and therefor, it can't. There's nothing about our climate that guarantees that we should be in any steady state, and geologically speaking, the earth's climate has bounced all over the place. Sure, you might argue that there is some asthetic utility to balancin
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I honestly have not seen anyone make that claim. The issue with GW is that we have realized that the climate is not a steady state thing at all, and that worse, we seemed to have kicked it out of that steady state, so scientists are utterly terrified because they hav
Best quote ever! (Score:5, Insightful)
We hear too often from these climate "experts", finally someone is ready to admit that our climate is so big and complex that we don't know exactly how it all works.
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Re:Best quote ever! (Score:5, Insightful)
If there's one thing I learned during my Atmospheric Physics course at university, it's that we only have somewhat good ideas, or decent approximations of how some of these things work in the best case, and vague approximations or no fricking clue in the worst cases.
This is why it bothers me so much when people talk about global climate change as if they know what is going to happen. Is it happening? Yeah! Is it probably not good? Yeah! Do we even know enough to be crying end of the world? No!
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Re:Best quote ever! (Score:5, Interesting)
Atmospheric Science heavily relies upon taking what little data we *do* know, and extrapolating as much useful information as we possibly can out of it.
And it actually works pretty well... "anomalies" that have turned up in forecast models very often turn out to actually exist in reality. It was this way that we determined that a considerable amount of ash and pollution produced by industrial activity in Asia gets blown all the way to North America. It was so counterintuitive that nobody had ever thought to test for it before the forecast model suggested that it was happening quite readily.
If you also want to see something really scary, read up on the CFC Ozone depleting reaction. If it weren't for a few seasonal processes that restore the Ozone, and more importantly, wash out the CFCs, we'd have burned off our entire atmosphere in just a few years.
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Will we ever know enough before it's too late? Probably not! Can we do some good things now to give us more time to learn what's going on? Not if everyone has your attitude...
If you continue to analyze until you completely understand everything, the time for effective action is probably long past.
Could you rephrase that? (Score:2)
Is it happening? Yeah! Is it probably not good? Yeah! Do we even know enough to be crying end of the world? No!
Will we ever know enough before it's too late? Probably not! Can we do some good things now to give us more time to learn what's going on? Not if everyone has your attitude...
If you continue to analyze until you completely understand everything, the time for effective action is probably long past.
And you propose we do, what... considering we don't know enough to take action. We could affirmatively decide to take inaction, although if we do that, we've taken an action thereby eliminating our objective of inaction. On the other hand, we could pass some laws and crack down on the industrial revolutions of third world countries all the while knowing that we don't know enough to make a responsible decision.
Reading back over this, it really sounds like a flame; it isn't, I just don't understand what
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That's good, but... (Score:2)
Here's a hint: If your solution to <Problem X> involves global socialism and isn't <people suffering needlessly while resources exist to alleviate it> then you're probably a little too invested in your solution to be trusted about the severity of the problem.
Similarly, if your solution involves reduction of productivity without even attempting to address the problems inherent in the inevitable reduction of available goods, you're probably also goin
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I wouldn't say we don't know exactly how it all works at the micro level but at the macro is a fairly simple concept.
The sun warms the earth at unevenly depending on the tilt and rotation of the earth. The atmosphere is moving anyways due to rotation but warm air and water moves from hot to cold areas to give off energy since there are no means
Re:Best quote ever! (Score:5, Funny)
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True, but SOME level of comprehension of the cause and the specific effect is useful if you purport to TREAT the consequences of the problem. If you just got whacked in the head with an axe handle, no amount of foot-cream is going to help you.
It's even more important if you intend to prevent the problem happening aga
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I will definitely vouch for his bona fides, though.
These clouds are a clear symptom of global warming (Score:5, Funny)
Re:These clouds are a clear symptom of global warm (Score:2)
We already know that Dihydrogen Monoxide has a large green house properties and is probably more prevalent in the atmosphere then Co2. It just makes sense to ban it.
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Re:These clouds are a clear symptom of global warm (Score:4, Interesting)
In fact, the electrolyte imbalance caused by consuming too much DHMO can kill you [wikipedia.org], too.
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More pictures (Score:5, Informative)
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Man, I love Science.
And I immediately think... (Score:5, Funny)
"All right, Beatrice, there was no alien. The flash of light you saw in the sky was not a UFO. Swamp gas from a weather balloon was trapped in a thermal pocket and reflected the light from Venus."
Visible in Ohio. (Score:5, Interesting)
It varies. (Score:2)
Here in southern Finland they are rather common sight near late July / early August.
This shot (and others in the same directory) which I took last year is IMO rather close to how they looked to my own eyes:
http://kapsi.fi/~myrjola/photos/digital/tmp/20060713-yopilvet/img_3244-tmp.jpg [kapsi.fi]
The sky is not dark
Razzmataz? (Score:2)
and there were singers of stars in the pond...
Maybe they will increase the budged by offering their version of "Name Your Star" for the low, low price of... $350
These Clouds are Filamentary (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.spaceweather.com/nlcs/gallery2007_page9.htm [spaceweather.com]
Nearly every single cloud structure is filamentary. People will surely say it's blasphemous to use the E-word, but structures like these
http://www.spaceweather.com/nlcs/images2007/16jun07/Heden1.jpg [spaceweather.com]
Are what you get in the laboratory with *electrical* plasmas. It's the same structure that you get in a novelty plasma globe. These look exactly like Birkeland Currents to me. I'm not even sure that "clouds" is the proper term for these things, given their proximity to space. Even the overhead view from the article in question demonstrates filamentation.
Re:These Clouds are Filamentary (Score:4, Insightful)
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Not that anybody really knows at this point, but for the record, it was only about ten years ago that we were told that lightning does not lead into space too.
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Everything you've said is certainly true. But the debate over electrical space plasmas has a rich history by now. The arguments that space plasmas can become highly electrical are solid arguments that have not been t
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http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2007/11dec_themis.htm?list136664 [nasa.gov]:
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From http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/themis/auroras/northern_lights.html [nasa.gov]:
Relax, guys! (Score:3, Funny)
Climate Science Manipulation Alleged [guardian.co.uk]
Obviously, this report didn't get properly vetted. By the end of the day it should be titled "Unday Clouds Shine Pretty! Doubleplus Good!"
they are coordinating from behind the moon (Score:4, Funny)
checkmate
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: )
One theory: X-rays (Score:5, Informative)
I found an article that is short and readable explaining the link between solar cycles and X-rays: http://solar.physics.montana.edu/nuggets/2000/000407/000407.html [montana.edu]. Note that the X-ray activity can vary hugely from the current solar minimum to, say, the 2000-2001 solar max.
The problem is that we don't have that much data on it yet. We need to accumulate several cycles worth of observations before we can answer these questions:
* When does the sun emit X-rays? Is it linked to sun spots?
* What do solar X-rays do to the upper atmosphere?
The X-rays are absorbed by the ionosphere (fortunately for life forms), and this energy transfer is not well known. During each solar minimum, less X-rays arrive in the upper atmosphere, which therefore should cool down. Is it the reason why we see these noctilucent clouds? If so, they should start disappearing in a couple of years, when sun spots return.
This is a very interesting keyhole on a yet unknown mechanism. I hope we'll see updates on the subject.
Clouds (Score:3, Funny)
A leading researcher commented as follows:
I've looked at clouds from both sides now
From up and down, and still somehow
It's cloud illusions I recall
I really don't know clouds at all
South Pole (Score:2)
Interpreting the data to fit with the times (Score:4, Insightful)
"These observations suggest a connection with global change in the lower atmosphere and could represent an early warning that our Earth environment is being changed."
* It could also suggest that documentation has been poor in the past (ref. quote 1) and that the higher rate is because more effort is spent on registering the climate in general.
* It could also suggest a _purely local_ non-human-related change. After all, the middle ages warm period has been discounted by climatologists as a purely half-a-hemisphere local phenomenon. There is hence no reason why the climate should not change in one region of the world alone.
* It could also suggest a _purely local_ human-related change, e.g. if it is related to soot in the atmosphere, or NOx
* It could also suggest a _cyclical_ event, either globally or locally, which the expressions used ('is being changed') alludes away from.
Simply saying "The observations could suggest that XYZ" is an unprofessional statement. All observations could suggest a large number of things - so if it is just a suggestion and you are a professional, do not make a statement on it, while if it is very likely to be, then say that it is likely instead.
Because you are looking for them! (Score:2, Insightful)
Very little is known about how these clouds form over the poles, why they are being seen more frequently and at lower latitudes than ever before, or why they have been growing brighter.
They are being seen more frequently now, because you are looking for them now! Just like those big waves [slashdot.org] that were denied existence until you went looking for them, and what do you know, they're all over the place. NASA needs to collect at least 100 years data before they can start generalizing about pattern and changes.
May be an early warning... (Score:2, Troll)
*salute* (Score:2)
I can tell you in advance, though, that there's a likely conclusion as to why noctilucent clouds are becoming more prevalent. That is predicted by the global warming simulations. The warmth being radiated from earth is being trapped in the lower atmosphere, and so while it heats up, the upper atmosphere actually cools. That's a solid hypothesis that's already
Fine, but has this work been checked by . . . (Score:2)
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I happen to know that this man's been running satellite experiment and gathering hard data for decades. If the models are so flimsy, they get tossed out. I'm sorry, but these are professionals, not the peanut gallery of pundits that charact
relax everyone (Score:2)
in the coming months, they are going to "disappear" some boats in the bermuda triangle and then plant area 51 documents on los alamos national laboratory computers, and then "leak" it
They're beautiful... and very high (Score:3, Informative)
I've seen these several times over the North Atlantic in the summer.
If you're not paying attention, your first impression is that they look like cirrus clouds viewed from the ground, only much more beautiful.
It's when you remember that you're already 30+ thousand feet up, and that these look like cirrus do when you're on the ground, that you realize how high they are. (That's plain English for 'mesosphere.')
Like satellites, you can see them when your sky is dark but they are catching sunlight due to their altitude.
Right up there with northern lights as a visual treat.
"Being Changed"? (Score:2)
The Earth's climate has NEVER stopped changing... It has been changing since there was a climate to begin with and it always will, drasticly and massivly. Don't go changing the language to fit the adgenda now, that's completely unscientific. "It may be another sign of the Earth's on-going climate change."
Your welcome.
They're not "Night Shining" (Score:2)
Something seems weird... (Score:2)
So the NASA satellite snaps a picture of the Arctic region, on June 11, and it's dark there? Shouldn't it be the middle of the arctic day?
And many of the other pictures seem simply to show very high clouds at dusk/dawn, the clouds still/already in sunlight but the ground below already/still in the dark. Is the question about why are the clouds up there, or why they shine?
brrr.... (Score:2)
Obviously a sign of Global Cooling...
Re:While little is known about these clouds... (Score:4, Interesting)
Something that has simply amazed me for a long time now is Freezing Fog. Maybe understanding that could lead to a better understanding of these clouds and your conclusion of global warming.
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Homostasis (Score:2)
You see, a low cloud blocks some sunlight coming in, but also blocks infrared going out. A very high cloud, however, blocks the same amount of sunlight ( not being significantly closer to the sun ) and blocks less infrared because only inrared going straight up will hit it. This works unless there is nearly 100% cloud cover.
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First Global Warming...
Then NASA finding mysterious glowing lights over the North pole...
Now the BBC reports finding an ancient polar bear's jawbone on Svalbard [bbc.co.uk]...
Is there a very subtle marketing campaign going on, or should God not be starting any long books?
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No,no, no (Score:2)
Uh . . . did we read the same article? (Score:2)
Clearly, you are the one who is jumping to conclusions without examining the evidence.
Enjoy your nap. Maybe you'll be a bit less cranky when you wake up.
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you lose.
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And of course there is also the evidence that this warming trend in our environment today is simply a part of Earth's cycle. It's a natural phenomenon, possibly helped further along by humans technological progression, but also just as likely helped by, you know, things like...volcanic eruptions, which can spew more CO2 in the air than most large cities and their car-driving occupants. The thing is, they've documented similar trends in the environment before, not in recent history granted, but if there is
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Sorry, you're not cleared for that (Score:2)