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Long-range weather prediction and prevention of climate catastrophes: a status report

Description/Abstract

As the human population of Earth continues to expand and to demand an ever-higher quality-of-life, requirements for ever-greater knowledge--and then control--of the future of the state of the terrestrial biosphere grow apace. Convenience of living--and, indeed, reliability of life itself--become ever more highly ''tuned'' to the future physical condition of the biosphere being knowable and not markedly different than the present one, Two years ago, we reported at a quantitative albeit conceptual level on technical ways-and-means of forestalling large-scale changes in the present climate, employing practical means of modulating insolation and/or the Earth's mean albedo. Last year, we reported on early work aimed at developing means for creating detailed, high-fidelity, all-Earth weather forecasts of two weeks duration, exploiting recent and anticipated advances in extremely high-performance digital computing and in atmosphere-observing Earth satellites bearing high-technology instrumentation. This year, we report on recent progress in both of these areas of endeavor. Preventing the commencement of large-scale changes in the current climate presently appears to be a considerably more interesting prospect than initially realized, as modest insolation reductions are model-predicted to offset the anticipated impacts of ''global warming'' surprisingly precisely, in both space and time. Also, continued study has not revealed any fundamental difficulties in any of the means proposed for insolation modulation and, indeed, applicability of some of these techniques to other planets in the inner Solar system seems promising. Implementation of the high-fidelity, long-range weather-forecasting capability presently appears substantially easier with respect to required populations of Earth satellites and atmospheric transponders and data-processing systems, and more complicated with respect to transponder lifetimes in the actual atmosphere; overall, the enterprise seems more technically feasible than originally anticipated.

Authors: Caldeira, K; Caravan, G; Govindasamy, B; Grossman, A; Hyde, R; Ishikawa, M; Ledebuhr, A; Leith, C; Molenkamp, C; Teller, E; Wood, L
Publication Date:1999 Aug 18
OSTI Identifier: 13772
Report Number(s):UCRL-JC-135414; YN0100000
DOE Contract Number:W-7405-ENG-48
Resource Type:Conference/Event
Resource Relation: The 24th International Seminar on Planetary Emergencies, Erice (IT), 08/19/1999--08/24/1999; Other Information: PBD: 18 Aug 1999
Research Org:Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (US)
Sponsoring Org:USDOE Office of Defense Programs (DP) (US)
Country of Publication:United States
Language:English
Format: Size: 4.6 Megabytes pages
Other Number(s):Other: YN0100000; TRN: AH200135%%293
Subject:54 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES; BIOSPHERE; CLIMATIC CHANGE; DATA PROCESSING; SATELLITES; SOLAR SYSTEM; WEATHER; FORECASTING
Update Date:2008 Feb 04

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