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Book Review : “A Natural History of Time”

This excellent book must now be regarded as the preferred starting point for anyone wishing to understand the history of efforts to know the earth’s age. click for more...

 
7 New Books
Carbon Footprint of Nations website wins recognition

How much carbon does your country emit - and where does it come from? Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) Professor Edgar Hertwich and colleague Glen Peters wanted to know the answer to that question - and created a website to do so. click for more...

 
Some interesting pages on volcanos

The pages refer to research projects, some completed and some ongoing, and is for general interest. click for more...

 
 

Geoscience Information For Teachers (GIFT) workshops 2010

A short Report on the GIFT workshops organised this year by the EGU Committee on Education click for more...

 
 
Return to Home Page Issue #31 08 July 2010   
 
Atmospheric implications of radiation belt remediation

In the following press release of the EGU Press and Media Office (http://www.egu-media.net/) of 9 August 2006, highlighting results published recently in Annales Geophysicae, potential dangers from a proposed US system to protect satellites from solar storms or high-altitude nuclear detonations are presented.

If activated, the envisaged “radiation belt remediation” system would significantly alter the upper atmosphere in the short term, seriously disrupting high frequency (HF) radio wave transmissions and GPS navigation around the globe, says the group’s lead researcher, Dr Craig Rodger of the University of Otago Physics Department.
 
The remediation system aims to protect hundreds of low earth-orbiting satellites from having their onboard electronics ruined by charged particles in unusually intense radiation belts “pumped up” by high-altitude nuclear explosions or powerful solar storms, says Dr Rodger.

The approach, which is being considered by the US Air Force and the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, involves using very low frequency radio waves to flush particles from belts and dump them into the upper atmosphere over either one or several days.

“We’ve calculated that Earth’s upper atmosphere would be dramatically affected by such a system, causing unusually intense HF blackouts around most of the world,” he says. “Airplane pilots and ships would lose radio contact and some Pacific Island nations could be isolated for as long as six to seven days, depending on the system’s design and how it was operated.”

"GPS would likely also suffer large-scale disruptions, as signals between ground users and satellites were scrambled by the ionosphere, he added. The disruptions result from a deluge of dumped charged particles temporarily changing the ionosphere from a “mirror” that bounces high frequency radio waves around the planet to a “sponge” that soaks them up," Dr Rodger says.

In their paper, just published in the August edition of Annales Geophysicae, the Otago researchers and UK and Finnish colleagues suggest that policymakers need to carefully consider the implications of remediation.

The researchers also calculated the likely effect of remediation on the ozone layer, but found that ozone depletion would be short-lived and similar to that resulting from natural processes such as large solar storms and volcanic eruptions.

The original paper is available online at  
http://www.copernicus.org/EGU/annales/24/7/2025.htm

 

Rodger, C. J. , Clilverd, M. A., Ulich, Th., Verronen, P. T., Turunen, E., and Thomson, N. R., The atmospheric implications of radiation belt remediation, Annales Geophysicae, Page(s) 2025-2041, 2006.

 
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The role of tectonic uplift, climate, and vegetation in the long-term terrestrial phosphorous cycle

A model helps describe how, with limited uplift and atmospheric input, as in the case of the Amazon Basin, ecosystems must rely on mechanisms that enhance P-availability and retention. click for more...

 
Special Issue in NPG

on Nonlinear Processes in Oceanic and Atmospheric Flows click for more...

 
Overview of areal changes of the ice shelves on the Antarctic Peninsula over the past 50 years

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Ionospheric transients observed at mid-latitudes prior to earthquake activity in Central Italy

Acoustic gravity waves are suggested as one of the possible sources of transients observed in the ionosphere before the EQ shock click for more...

 
First images and orientation of fine structure from a 3-D seismic oceanography data set

Work demonstrates the viability of imaging oceanic fine structure in 3-D and obtaining quantitative information such as the spatial orientation of fronts and solitons from 3-D seismic images click for more...

 
A remote sensing technique for global monitoring of power plant CO2 emissions from space

and related applications click for more...

 
Pliocene Model Intercomparison Project (PlioMIP)

experimental design and boundary conditions click for more...

 
Brief Communication: Ikaite (CaCO3·6H2O) discovered in Arctic sea ice

finding demonstrates that the precipitation of calcium carbonate during the freezing of sea ice is not restricted to the Antarctic click for more...

 
Millennial and sub-millennial scale climatic variations

recorded in polar ice cores over the last glacial period click for more...

 
Estimating drizzle drop size and precipitation rate using two-colour lidar measurements

The method exploits the differential absorption of infrared light by liquid water at 905 nm and 1.5 ́m click for more...

 
The relationship between subsurface hydrology and dissolved carbon fluxes

for a sub-arctic catchment click for more...

 
 
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