Poster's note - a good, in-depth discussion about a little-discussed
element of SRM impacts.  However, the changes discussed are perhaps
best understood by the impact of light pollution on existing urban
populations.

http://op-talk.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/02/20/what-if-we-lost-the-sky/?_r=1

What If We Lost the Sky?

By Anna North February 20, 2015 11:49 am February 20, 2015 11:49 am

What is the sky worth?

This sounds like a philosophical question, but it might become a more
concrete one. A report released last week by the National Research
Council called for research into reversing climate change through a
process called albedo modification: reflecting sunlight away from
earth by, for instance, spraying aerosols into the atmosphere. Such a
process could, some say, change the appearance of the sky — and that
in turn could affect everything from our physical health to the way we
see ourselves.

If albedo modification were actually implemented, Alan Robock, a
professor of environmental sciences at Rutgers, told Joel Achenbach at
The Washington Post: “You’d get whiter skies. People wouldn’t have
blue skies anymore.” And, he added, “astronomers wouldn’t be happy,
because you’d have a cloud up there permanently. It’d be hard to see
the Milky Way anymore.”

Losing the night sky would have big consequences, said Dacher Keltner,
a psychology professor at the University of California, Berkeley. His
recent work looks at the health effects of the emotion of awe. In a
study published in January in the journal Emotion, he and his team
found that people who experienced a great deal of awe had lower levels
of a marker of inflammation that has been linked to physical and
mental ailments. One major source of awe is the natural world. “When
you go outside, and you walk in a beautiful setting, and you just feel
not only uplifted but you just feel stronger,” said Dr. Keltner,
“there’s clearly a neurophysiological basis for that.”

And, he added, looking up at a starry sky provides “almost a
prototypical awe experience,” an opportunity to feel “that you are
small and modest and part of something vast.”

Research on the benefits of awe, he said, suggests that without a
starry sky, “kids are going to be less imaginative, we’re going to be
less modest and less kind to each other,” and “it may cost us in terms
of health.”

If we lose the night sky, he said, “we lose something precious and sacred.”

He believes whitening the daytime sky might result in “that same loss
of the sense of what’s vast,” a sense his team’s research suggests is
“one of the most important things that people build into their lives.”

Paul K. Piff, a professor of psychology and social behavior at the
University of California, Irvine, says that when he studied awe among
the Himba in Namibia, “the night sky was one of the very clear
elicitors” of the emotion. The sky “has this really important role,
obviously, in all sorts of different historical ways for the
development of humankind and human consciousness, but it also has this
shared feature of, no matter where you are and where you come from, it
seems to brings about this really, really amazing and transformative
experience.”

“We’re finding in our lab that the experience of awe gets you to feel
connected to something larger than yourself, see the humanity in other
people,” he explained. “In many ways it’s kind of an antidote to
narcissism.” And the sky is one of the few sources of that experience
that’s available to almost everybody: “Not everyone has access to the
ocean or giant trees, or the Grand Canyon, but we certainly all live
beneath the night sky.”

“Everyone’s looked up at the sky and wondered what our place is
relative to the universe,” he said, “and so blotting out the stars
would deprive people of this extremely compelling, awe-inspiring,
transformative and cherished experience that we all share.”

***

“We used to be a lot more connected to the sky,” said the artist Ken
Murphy. “It used to be either you’d look at the campfire, look at the
sky, or go to bed, and now our lives have radically changed, and I
think there’s definitely a loss in that.”

For his project “A History of the Sky,” he set up a camera to take a
photograph of the San Francisco sky every 10 seconds for a year. He
then made a time-lapse movie of each day and arranged them into a
grid, creating a sort of video diary of the view above the city:

“While I was shooting, I was very tuned into what was going on with
the sky,” he said. “It’s very compelling to witness what’s going on
over our heads.”

On long backpacking trips, his focus often turns to the sky: “It
becomes this unfolding drama every night, and you really can see how
in history we’ve spun these elaborate myths around things going on in
the sky. It must have been such a huge part of people’s consciousness
before we had all these other distractions.”

“It’s a horribly disturbing thought to me that that would be
permanently obscured in some way,” he said.

For Jennifer Wu, a photographer and a co-author of the book
“Photography: Night Sky,” the starry sky is “one of those things that
I hope that people will always enjoy.”

“When we go out and we see the stars there’s that connection,” she
said. “We have creativity, we get renewed. There’s kind of a
refreshing feeling about going out and being outdoors at night and
seeing the stars.”

If something came between us and the stars, she said, “we won’t be
able to photograph them as much.” This is already a problem for
city-dwellers, she noted — because of light pollution, many in dense
areas can’t see or photograph the stars.

“I love seeing the Milky Way,” she added. “Going out and seeing this
incredible, beautiful band of light overhead, it’s just magnificent,
and it would be disappointing to not see it anymore,” to lose the
feeling that “we’re just one of these little dots among these many.”

Dimming the appearance of the stars would also make it harder for
astronomers to study them. Telescope technology has just reached a
point, said Steven Flanders, the public affairs coordinator for
Caltech’s Palomar Observatory, “where the corrective systems on these
telescopes are able now increasingly to compensate for the blurring of
the earth’s atmosphere. At least at visual wavelengths, we don’t need
to go out into space as we did with the Hubble Space Telescope,
because we can do as well or better with corrective technology.” And,
he said, “that whole process is for naught if we lose access to the
night sky.”

One area that might suffer, he said, is the effort to identify planets
in other solar systems. And that effort plays a big role in keeping
the public interested in astronomy: When “we talk about planets,” he
explained, “we talk about the search for life.”

As for how the loss of a swath of astronomical research would affect
humanity, he said, “at a practical level, I don’t think we would lose
anything.” But “at another level,” he said, “we would lose some of the
curiosity that in some manner helps keep this society vibrant and
moving.”

“The search for life is terribly exciting,” he added, “and you can
argue that a society, any society, needs that kind of stimulus in
various forms.”

***

It’s not completely clear, some researchers say, just how much
aerosols would change the look of the sky. “You are essentially
putting stuff between you and the light,” said Waleed Abdalati, a
professor of geography at the University of Colorado, Boulder, and one
of the authors of the report. “So when you’re talking about dim light
like stars,” he explained, “it’s certainly conceivable and even likely
that they would appear dimmer.” Aerosols might whiten the sky during
the day as well. How visible these effects are, he said, would depend
on how much material was injected into the atmosphere — and we don’t
yet know how much we’d want to inject, because we don’t yet know what
the other side effects of such injection might be.

Ben Kravitz, a postdoctoral researcher at Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory who has studied the possibility of albedo modification
through aerosols, said in an email that according to current models,
the whitening effect of aerosol injection “would be similar to the
whiter sky that is often seen in large cities or areas with industrial
pollution.” As for starlight, he said, “I don’t know of any study
showing that the aerosols would obscure the stars; that sounds like an
interesting research problem.”

Alan Robock, the environmental sciences professor, mentioned one
possible upside in an interview: “You’d get these beautiful red and
yellow sunsets,” as “the yellow and red colors reflect off the bottom
of this cloud.”

He recommends more research into albedo modification: “If people ever
are tempted to do this, I want them to have a lot of information about
what the potential benefits and risks would be so they can make an
informed decision.”

Part of understanding those risks and benefits may be evaluating the
emotional impacts of making big changes to the way the sky looks. Of
these impacts, Dr. Abdalati said, “my own view is they’re huge.”

“I think in time their magnitude will diminish as it becomes the new
normal,” he said. But “for the generation that makes the decision to
undertake something like that, to deploy something like that, I think
the implications would be profound.”

Still, he believes “it’s incumbent upon us to understand the options
before us, even if they’re options that may never be deployed.” That
means making an effort to keep climate change from worsening in the
first place, exploring ways to remove carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere once its there — and understanding the implications of
putting aerosols in the atmosphere, even if we never do it. “Deploying
something like albedo modification is a last-ditch effort,” he
explained. “I think it’s one that should be avoided at all costs, but
should be understood.”

And, he said, “we’ve gotten ourselves into a climate mess. The fact
that we’re even talking about these kinds of things is indicative of
that.”

For Dr. Keltner, the sky is a source of awe. For Ms. Wu, it’s a fount
of creativity. And if it one day turns white, it may become something
else: a reminder that humanity ran out of options.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to