Cooling the Arctic will drop the temperature and get to the fundamental
cause of shrinking ice: rising temperature.



In the meantime, the formation of ice can be vastly accelerated by a simple
and well demonstrated technology: pump water on top of ice during the
winter. The fundamental concept is that there is plenty of “cold” in the
winter, one simply gets around the insulating impact of the ice itself (in
nature, incremental sea ice forms at the bottom of the sheet).



Spray technologies, energy intensive, have built ice islands for drilling
platforms in one season that are 8 meters plus in thickness; this is much
like making “snow” on ski hills. Ice bridges are typically built with low
energy intensity: just pump water on top of existing ice.



One merit of this approach is that it can be instantly stopped if any
unanticipated negative impact arises, reducing the fear factor in the
uninformed.



Making sea ice doesn’t address the rising temperature itself other than by
restoring the albedo of the ice cover itself, but it does sustain the ice.
I think it is a good companion to temperature/insolation modification
schemes.



Peter Flynn



Peter Flynn, P. Eng., Ph. D.

Emeritus Professor and Poole Chair in Management for Engineers

Department of Mechanical Engineering

University of Alberta

[email protected]

cell: 928 451 4455







*From:* [email protected] [mailto:
[email protected]] *On Behalf Of *John Nissen
*Sent:* January-02-15 8:50 AM
*To:* [email protected]
*Cc:* Alan Gadian; Stephen Salter; geoengineering
*Subject:* Re: [geo] Watch "Integrated Assessment of Geoengineering
Proposals…" on YouTube



Dear Rob,

This is an extremely relevant discussion for any attempt to cool the Arctic
in order to halt sea ice retreat.  (There is strong evidence that the
retreat is already having an effect on N Hemisphere climate due to jet
stream disruption, so a strong argument to try cooling the Arctic ASAP.)

The two main approaches being considered are (i) to produce a reflecting
stratospheric haze at mid to high latitude and (ii) to brighten marine
clouds (MCB) in the troposphere over the North Atlantic and North Pacific.
In both cases the aim is to cool surface water flowing into the Arctic and
thereby slow sea ice melt and allow it to reform more easily.  Much of the
surface water at higher latitudes (between about 50N and 70N) finds its way
into the Arctic.  About 10% of the world's freshwater flows in the Arctic
Ocean.

Most of your discussion has involved consideration of MCB, creating the
cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) from ships.  Since there are so many
unknowns about the effectiveness, couldn't we have some useful experiments
from aircraft, or has this been done already?  For example, you point out
that turbulence changes could reduce or enhance the initial enhancement -
and if it is a reduction this could be showstopper.

Two further approaches for cooling the Arctic involve clouds: (iii) cloud
removal to increase outgoing thermal radiation, and (iv) cloud seeding to
produce fresh snow and thereby increase surface albedo on a regional
scale.  In both these cases, we need to test the production of CCN from
aircraft and monitor effectiveness.

Could you envisage a crash programme for testing of these various
approaches, to see which is most appropriate and effective in different
locations, at different times of year and under different circumstances
(existing cloud conditions, etc)?  Has anything like this been done already?



Cheers, John





On Thu, Jan 1, 2015 at 4:47 PM, Rob Wood <[email protected]> wrote:

A straightforward way to prevent plume sinking (if indeed it turns out
to be undesirable for particle dispersion), is to heat the stack. This
happens already on all cargo ships.



I don't believe that coagulation will be a showstopper although
experiments will be necessary to confirm this because coagulation
depends on the exact size distribution and charging and this cannot be
predicted from modeling alone. Some degree of charging may well occur
(not my expertise) but this will likely depend on the spray method.
Effervescent spray atomization (see Cooper et al. article in Phil
Trans 2014 special issue), does not seem to make a lot of charged
particles.



Observations show that shiptracks are rarely observed in boundary
layers deeper than 1km. Globally, most stratocumulus occurs in PBLs
deeper than this. But shiptracks themselves (although highly visible)
are not necessary for MCB to work. Greater dispersion in the subcloud
layer prior to ascent into the stratocumulus deck in the
intermittently coupled layer above, might increase efficacy by
producing a more evenly distributed droplet concentration enhancement
(Stephen alluded to this).



That said, I disagree that the albedo enhancement required (e.g., to
offset CO2 doubling globally, i.e., about 4 W/m2) is small. Only 20%
of the planet has clouds that may be seedable, so the solar reflection
of seeded clouds would need to be enhanced by >20 W/m2 (this number
being generous because it is highly unlikely that uniform seeding is
possible). This is about one fifth to one quarter of typical cloud
albedo.



More important than whether the human eye can detect the brightening,
is that spatial albedo enhancement gradients, and changes to the
condensate amounts due to e.g. drizzle suppression, will drive
turbulence changes and also regional scale circulation changes that
produce cloud adjustments that could reduce or enhance the initial
enhancement. For example, it is known that on average, condensate
amounts in shiptracks are lower than in surrounding clouds (e.g.
Coakley and Walsh 2002, Chen et al. 2014) because reduced
precipitation in the track leads to stronger turbulence which drives
greater entrainment of dry free tropospheric air that thins the cloud
layer. Ackerman et al. (2004, Nature) first noticed this in large eddy
models, and I wrote a paper that attempted to explain this behavior
with a simple model (Wood, J. Atmos. Sci. 2007). These responses are
difficult to capture in climate models as they depend upon subgrid
scale processes that are poorly represented in models with re

solutions greater than a few hundred meters horizontal and a few
meters in the vertical. A big challenge. This *might* be the biggest
showstopper of all for MCB.

Regards

Rob



On 1/1/2015 4:36 AM, Alan Gadian wrote:


Stephen,

I am afraid I cannot comment on the electrification, but I would like to
emphasise the dynamics again.  WRF (and WRF Chem ) can be driven either by
an observed real data, or in an idealised WRF - LEM form ( with no BL
parameterisation scheme) driven from an atmospheric profile

In all LEM modelling of Sc, an important feature is always entrainment and
mixing.  The horizontal and vertical velocities and the "rolls" or
"eddies" are critical in this. If there is a decoupled layer near the
surface, for example, as is sometimes / often observed then this will
critically affect the dispersion. I am still uncertain what was run in the
WRF chem simulation, what BL scheme was used in the IGAP runs, but the
argument I am proposing was that the velocity structure is unlikely to
be correct, unless actually verified with observations.

I am trying the think of examples. Yamaguchi &  Feingold , 2014, show the
changes in turbulence patterns, Wang and Fiengold (2009) and other work
including that of Wood ( not mentioned as he is part of this discussion)
show examples of this importance of the turbulence and eddies.

I know that volcanoes are completely different, and this work is not at the
required resolution for SC clouds, but the attached poster, probably
without video, is some work that we did.  We had to run WRF in LEM mode to
get anywhere near the correct eddy structures for the near volcanic plume
eddies.  Again looking at the high resolution modelling work of AndrejczuK
(some of which Rob was again involved with), the role of the interaction
between the dynamical eddy structure and the microphysics and latent heat
exchange is crucial.

Thus again, I feel that there are a lot of uncertainties in the modelling
work, and the only way to see if MCB works is to do an experiment

Alan Gadian





On Thu, 1 Jan 2015, Stephen Salter wrote:


Hi All

The words 'charge' and 'electrostatic' do not appear in Stuart et 2013.
People cleaning oil tanks in the 1960's found the painful way that its is
difficult NOT to generate charge, see
http://www.infostatic.co.uk/Papers/TankWashingRisks.pdf   .  There are at
least two ways by which we can control charge.

The Stuart paper used a size distribution of 100 size bins, spaced
logarithmically between 10 nm and 10 μm in wet diameter rather than
mono-disperse spray.  This is a range of 1000:1.  I hope to keep within
20%.  Coagulation requires a relative velocity between drops.  Viscous
forces are very large at sub-micron dimension.  Particles will behave like
sand in honey.  Small scale turbulence will tend to vary the velocity of
particles but while the Stokes drag force goes with the first power of
diameter the mass resisting acceleration goes with the cube.  If there is a
wide range of drop diameters, local turbulence will produce much larger
range of relative velocities.  It would be useful to know coagulation rates
for narrow ranges of drop diameter.

In my paper on the detection of small contrast changes I assumed a loss of
50% which would not be a show stopper.

In figure 2 of of the Stuart paper there is no sign of any initial drop due
to evaporative cooling.

Stephen


Emeritus Professor of Engineering Design. School of Engineering. University
of Edinburgh. Mayfield Road. Edinburgh EH9 3JL. Scotland [email protected]
Tel +44 (0)131 650 5704 Cell 07795 203 195 WWW.see.ed.ac.uk/~shs YouTube
Jamie Taylor Power for Change

On 01/01/2015 02:48, Alan Gadian wrote:
      Rob,
I agree here with you.  With LEM modelling with WRF Chem, the bdy
layer schemes can be very diffusive.  Ignoring the electrostatics
charge element, I am concerned that the PDFs of the vertical
velocities are critical.  From experience 20m is not good enough
resolution in the vertical. How does the model cope with changes in
cloud droplet number, as seen in andrejczuk  (2012 aNd 2014) .  The
vocals profiles provide data on the BL dynamical profiles, and I fear
with the wef chem LEM results, the dynamics and hence the dispersion
are inadequately represented.  WRF Chem is about 20 times slower than
WRF without the chemistry package, and thus the representation of the
dynamics has to be compromised for the inclusion of the chemistry.  I
would like it clarified about how these results compare with
observations.

The papers of Andrejcuck provide a surprisingly efficient and rapid
dispersion, and compare reasonably well with observations.

Alan


T --- Alan Gadian, NCAS, UK, ( sent from a mobile device ) Email:
[email protected]  or [email protected]
Tel: +44 / 0  775 451 9009 or +44 / 0  113 343 7246
T ---

On 31 Dec 2014, at 23:46, Rob Wood <[email protected]>
<[email protected]> wrote:

      Dear All,

      I think that some degree of coagulation given such
      localized point sources of large numbers of particles is
      inevitable, as shown in the paper by Stuart et al. (2013).
      This will also be the case with charged particles.
      Nevertheless, I don't think that this is necessarily a
      fundamental limitation. After all, shiptrack formation,
      where even larger numbers of particles are produced, still
      occurs. Coagulation must be considered in the
      calculations. That said, in our recent paper (Connolly et
      al. 2014), we found significant albedo enhancement in a
      parcel model even with quite broad size distributions. The
      optimal median particle size becomes smaller as the size
      distribution spread broadens (e.g. from coagulation). For
      broader distributions typical of those produced in lab
      tests, the optimal median droplet diameters need to be
      somewhat smaller than 0.1 micron.

      I tend to agree with Stephen that near-surface spreading
      due to initial negative buoyancy from evaporation of water
      from the small seawater droplets may not necessarily be a
      tremendous problem for the reasons he states. This has not
      yet been considered in any model that I know of, but could
      easily be done with large eddy models.

      Rob Wood


      On 12/30/2014 8:35 AM, Stephen Salter wrote:
      Hi All

      Piers Forster's  concern in his video about spray
      coagulation would be reduced if his model had used
      mono-disperse drops with an electrostatic charge as
      specified in our  2008 paper on sea-going hardware.

      His concern about detecting the effectiveness is
      because the cloud contrast change needed to save
      humanity is below the detection threshold of the
      human eye.  However contrast can be enhanced by the
      superposition of satellite aligned images.  I have
      previously circulated some to this group and hope
      that the idea will give quantitative results in a
      few days.

      The picture of spray plumes shown in box 3 of his
      IAGP practicalities note must have been using warm
      air from a chimney.  Depending on the temperature
      and relative humidity of the surrounding ambient air
      there will be several degrees of temperature drop
      due to the latent heat of evaporation.  The increase
      of density will lead to a rapid fall of the cooled
      air which will spread out over the sea surface like
      a spilt liquid until it has been warmed by the large
      area of contact with sea. You can show this fall and
      dispersion very cheaply with a pond fogger, £19.99
      from Maplin.  We want this dispersion because a low
      dose over a large area is more effective than a high
      point dose.

      Forster seems to be ignoring completely the idea of
      coded modulation of CCN concentration in climate
      models even though the satisfactory operation was
      demonstrated by Ben Parkes doing a PhD in Forster's
      own Department at Leeds in 2012. This might allow us
      to get an everywhere-to-everywhere transfer function
      of marine cloud brightening and win-win result with
      more rain in dry places and less in wet.  The high
      frequency response means that we can give a tactical
      spraying based local day-to-day observations.

      It is a puzzle that the Parkes thesis has, yet
      again, vanished from the Leeds University website.

      Stephen



      Emeritus Professor of Engineering Design. School of
      Engineering. University of Edinburgh. Mayfield Road.
      Edinburgh EH9 3JL. Scotland [email protected] Tel
      +44 (0)131 650 5704 Cell 07795 203 195
      WWW.see.ed.ac.uk/~shs YouTube Jamie Taylor Power for
      Change
On 28/12/2014 20:03, Andrew Lockley wrote:

      Integrated Assessment of Geoengineering
      Proposals…: http://youtu.be/FFjzzfCLCqw

      Poster's note : I personally have found it
      very difficult to access and appraise the
      science behind the IAGP project. Despite this,
      a vast amount of publicity has been obtained
      for the project. I think the IAGP team could
      do more to encourage early, in-depth access to
      their material, particularly bearing in mind
      the huge media interest.

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