Unexpected discovery could impact on future climate models
Dust plumes blowing off the coast of Western Sahara over the Atlantic
Ocean
Credit: NASA/NOAA
Astronomers have made an unexpected find using a polarimeter (an instrument
used to measure the wave properties of light) funded by the Science and
Technology Facilities Council (STFC), that has the potential to affect future
climate models.
University of Hertfordshire astronomers were making observations of the
stars in search of new planets after mounting the 'PlanetPol' (polarimeter they
designed and constructed to take extremely sensitive readings) on the William
Herschel Telescope (part of the Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes) in La Palma
in the Canary Islands, when their measurements became affected by a layer of
dust.
The presence of the dust itself, which satellite images and modelling of the
dust's movement show had originated from the Sahara and the Sahel, was not a
surprise, but its behaviour was. Scientists normally assume that aerosols,
including mineral dust, have random orientation in the atmosphere, but the team
members say the polarizing affect the dust was having on the light could only
be the result of dust particles being vertically aligned.
Furthermore, electric fields that are now thought to be responsible for this
phenomenon are likely to affect the transport of dust over long distances. For
the first time this might explain why large Saharan dust grains can travel as
far as the UK instead of falling to the ground long before.
This could impact on climate theories because atmospheric dust is a
significant source of uncertainty for scientists trying to model the climate.
'If it's proven the dust is affected by electric fields, elements of current
climate models may have to be re-worked with this new information, to remain
accurate', explains Joseph Ulanowski, Centre for Atmospheric and
Instrumentation Research (CAIR) at the University of Hertfordshire.
Dust storm hits the Canary Islands
Credit: Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Land Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC
Climate models are extremely complex and involve many other influences, so
further research will now be carried out to see how significant a find this
dust phenomenon is. CAIR will now join a Met Office-led campaign in the Middle
East in the spring 2009 which presents an opportunity to investigate this
further.
Professor James Hough, Director of Astronomy Research at the University of
Hertfordshire said, 'It's been fascinating to see how we have been able to use
astronomical observations to learn far more about dust in the Earth's
atmosphere, especially as we first considered the Saharan dust event to be a
real nuisance and of no value to us at all.'
Notes for editors
The polarimeter, called PlanetPol, was designed and constructed by the
University of Hertfordshire using funding from the Science and Technology
Facilities Council. It can be mounted on any large telescope. In this case it
was mounted on the William Herschel Telescope, part of the Isaac Newton Group
of telescopes (ING) in La Palma in the Canary Islands.
Contact
-
Lucy Stone
STFC Press Officer
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
Tel: + 44 (0)1235 445627
University of Hertfordshire
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network of over 160,000 alumni.
CAIR is based at the
University of Hertfordshire and undertakes research into atmospheric
interactions and microphysical processes affecting radiative properties and air
quality.
Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes
The Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes (ING) consists of the 4.2 metre William
Herschel Telescope, and the 2.5 metre Isaac Newton Telescope. The telescopes
are owned and operated jointly by the Science and Technology Facilities Council
(STFC) of the United Kingdom, the Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk
Onderzoek (NWO) of the Netherlands and the Instituto de Astrofísica de
Canarias (IAC) of Spain. The telescopes are located in the Spanish Observatorio
del Roque de los Muchachos on La Palma, Canary Islands which is operated by the
Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias (IAC).
About STFC
Page last updated: 10 February 2009
by Lucy Stone