We'd be better off painting the world black and collecting the solar radiation and using that rather than burning coal. I could be wrong, but a slight change in the albedo of the earth is likely a drop in the bucket compared to the greenhouse gas effect as a whole.
What about Antarctica itself? Its been covered with ice for millions of years. Acting like one big mirror reflecting most of the electromagnetic radiation directly back to space. Indeed, the effect you seem to anticipate, is measurable. Im quite sure you will find scientific literature explaining this (maybe even on Nasas site) in detail.
"This" is a simple, tested and very effective measure... :))
It's not heat being reflected into space, but mainly visible light, which is reflected before it was transformed into heat. The visible light that comes from the sun accounts for much of the heat you feel when you touch a black car for example. Once transformed into heat, it heats up the surrounding air (by convection) and it "radiates" into free space. The problem with that second part is that radiation at that wavelength is trapped by the greenhouse gazes in the atmosphere.
We'd be better off painting the world black and collecting the solar radiation and using that rather than burning coal. I could be wrong, but a slight change in the albedo of the earth is likely a drop in the bucket compared to the greenhouse gas effect as a whole.
Supralobe 1 year ago
This idea is a little simplistic.
This assumes that any heat reflected back, will be sent all the way to outer space.
Would it not just be reflected back into the air, causing the air to be warmer than normal.
The air is then at some point moved to Antarctica where it heats up the ice and melts it.
Correct me if I'm wrong.
artman102 1 year ago
@artman102
What about Antarctica itself? Its been covered with ice for millions of years. Acting like one big mirror reflecting most of the electromagnetic radiation directly back to space. Indeed, the effect you seem to anticipate, is measurable. Im quite sure you will find scientific literature explaining this (maybe even on Nasas site) in detail.
"This" is a simple, tested and very effective measure... :))
terroil 1 year ago
@artman102
It's not heat being reflected into space, but mainly visible light, which is reflected before it was transformed into heat. The visible light that comes from the sun accounts for much of the heat you feel when you touch a black car for example. Once transformed into heat, it heats up the surrounding air (by convection) and it "radiates" into free space. The problem with that second part is that radiation at that wavelength is trapped by the greenhouse gazes in the atmosphere.
dojinho 1 year ago
@artman102
"Correct me if I'm wrong."
Look up "albedo"
BeondaPale 4 months ago