
PALO ALTO, Calif., June 29 (UPI) -- A cloud-seeding scheme proposed to combat global warming could change global rainfall patterns and result increased monsoonal rains, researchers say.
Whitening clouds over the world's oceans to reflect more sunlight and reduce global warming could in fact increase monsoonal rains causing wetter conditions on land, a Carnegie Institution study released Monday said.
Seeding could make clouds whiter by reducing the size of water droplets making up the clouds, a researcher says.
"Rain clouds, which have big droplets, tend to be gray and absorb sunlight, whereas clouds with smaller droplets tend to be white and fluffy and reflect more sunlight to space," says study co-author Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie's Department of Global Ecology.
In computer simulations, whiter clouds reflected more solar radiation and offset the warming effect of the high carbon dioxide levels, Caldeira said.
But in the simulations, the reflective oceanic clouds preferentially cooled the air over the oceans relative to land, setting up a monsoonal air flow that changed existing rainfall patterns, the study said.
"Our basic result calls into question previous assumptions about the impact of this geoengineering scheme," Caldeira said. "It merits further investigation."
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Additional Science News Stories | |
WASHINGTON, May 31 (UPI) --
The U.S. House Thursday rejected a bill that would outlaw abortions based on gender, with abortion opponents promising to make the vote an election issue.
|
The latest news on today's hottest celebrities ...
|
BALTIMORE, May 31 (UPI) --
U.S. astronomers are forecasting the Milky Way will have a violent collision with the neighboring Andromeda galaxy in about 4 billion years.
|
Nine sets of twins to graduate together … 93-year-old man competing as sprinter … Police: Drug dealers texted officer … Police: Arrested suspect stole handcuffs … The world as we know it from UPI.
|
| Stories | Photos | People | Comments |
View Caption