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NASA scientists have found that cirrus clouds, formed
by contrails from aircraft engine exhaust, are capable of increasing average
surface temperatures enough to account for a warming trend in the United States
that occurred between 1975 and 1994.
According to Patrick Minnis, a senior research
scientist at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., there has been a
one percent per decade increase in cirrus cloud cover over the United States,
likely due to air traffic. Cirrus clouds exert a warming influence on the
surface by allowing most of the Sun’s rays to pass through but then trapping
some of the resulting heat emitted by the surface and lower
atmosphere.
Using a general circulation model, Minnis estimates
that cirrus clouds from contrails increased the temperatures of the lower
atmosphere by anywhere from 0.36 to 0.54°F per decade. Minnis’s results show
good agreement with weather service data, which reveal that the temperature of
the surface and lower atmosphere rose by almost 0.5°F per decade between 1975
and 1994.
This enhanced infrared image from the Moderate
Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS), aboard NASA’s Terra satellite, shows widespread
contrails over the southeastern United States during the morning of January 29,
2004. Such satellite data are critical for studying the effects of contrails.
The crisscrossing white lines are contrails that form from planes flying in
different directions at different altitudes. Each contrail spreads and moves
with the wind. Contrails often form over large areas during winter and
spring.
For information about why NASA studies contrails,
read: Clouds Caused By Aircraft Exhaust May Warm The U.S.
Climate.
Image courtesy NASA Langley Research
Center
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