https://www.thebrighterside.news/post/space-bubbles-can-fully-reverse-climate-change-study-finds

"Space bubbles" can fully reverse climate change, study finds

[*Aug. 15, 2023: **Carlo Ratti*, MIT Senseable City Laboratory
<https://senseable.mit.edu/space-bubbles/>]
MIT researchers proposes 'Space Bubbles' to shield Earth from the sun's
rays to combat the devastation (CREDIT: MIT)

While addressing climate change necessarily requires lowering CO2 emission
on the Earth, other approaches such as geoengineering could supplement such
efforts if current mitigation and adaptation measures turned out to be
inadequate for reversing the ongoing climate change trends. In particular,
solar geoengineering—a set of technologies aiming to reflect a fraction of
sunlight coming to the Earth—has been theoretically proved to be a valuable
solution for supplementing current efforts for CO2 emission reductions.

Solar geoengineering is one of the least extensively researched topics in
climate science technologies. Most research efforts have concentrated on
dissolving reflective chemical components in the troposphere or
stratosphere that would offset the incoming solar radiation, facing issues
of irreversibility and further greenhouse effects. Space-based
geoengineering provides an opportunity to solve the problem with no direct
effect on stratospheric chemistry.

James Early proposed the idea of a multilayer deflective film to be
deployed at the Lagrangian Point (L1, see Figure 1a below) in between the
Sun and the Earth decreasing the incident sunlight by 1.8%. Roger Angel,
building on Early’s research, investigated the idea of a swarm of small
spacecraft unfolding smaller shields, proposing an early feasibility plan
for the technology.

The main challenges associated with the above proposals are the complexity
of pre-fabricating a large film, and transporting and unfolding it in outer
space. Other ideas include creating a cloud of dust from asteroids at L1,
which poses the problem of keeping the material confined. Among the issues
with the existing approaches: the amount of material needed, the difficulty
of in-space fabrication, and the non-reversibility of such geoengineering
projects.

In general, most research has not moved from a rough feasibility study
stage yet. In this proposal, we are bringing together an interdisciplinary
team of MIT scientists to do a next level of feasibility.

*Related Stories*

As a working hypothesis researchers propose to explore the idea of
shielding solar radiation by deploying a set of bubble rafts composed of
arrays of interconnected small inflatable bubbles close to the Lagrangian
Point L1 in between the Sun and the Earth. They believe that inflating
thin-film spheres directly in space from a homogeneous molten material–such
as silicon–can provide the variation in thickness that refracts a broader
wave spectrum and allows us to avoid the necessity of launching large
structural film elements.

Spheres can be directly manufactured in space, optimizing shipping costs.
Moreover, as bubbles can be intentionally destroyed by breaking their
surface equilibrium, this would make the solar geoengineering solution
fully reversible and significantly reduce space debris. Please note,
however, that they feel the bubble raft is only a working hypothesis at the
moment.

Interdisciplinary in its nature, the project involves an array of research
problems in a number of disciplines, from the optics and mechanics of
thin-films in space, to the impact of shading on the Earth, to the public
policy implementation. Subsections below present the major challenges and
preliminary strategies of tackling them:
Material

A fundamental phase in this project is selecting the right material and
technology to fabricate and maintain thin-film spheres in outer space
conditions. In the researchers preliminary experiments, they succeeded at
inflating a thin-film bubble at a pressure of 0.0028 atm, and maintaining
it at around –50°C (to approximate space conditions of zero pressure and
near-zero temperature, see Figure 1c).
Figure 1 – (a) L1 Lagrangian point location as described in [5] (b) Bubble
raft on a water surface (courtesy University of Wisconsin) (c) Frozen ~20
mm-diameter thin-film bubble at 0.0028 atm (experiment carried out at MIT)
(CREDIT: MIT)

Further research will investigate the use of other types of low
vapor-pressure materials to rapidly inflate and assemble bubble rafts
(including silicon-based melts, and graphene-reinforced Ionic Liquids which
have ultra-low vapor pressures and relatively low densities); key design
metrics include the viscous, interfacial thermal properties of the bubble
formers during inflation as well as the optical and structural properties
of the bubble rafts when exposed to sun radiation.
Mass density and cost efficiency

Researchers plan to study whether a bubble-based shield is mass-efficient
compared to other proposed shading solutions. As thin fluid spheres are
inflated, the minimal thickness of the liquid film forming the shell can
theoretically be as low as 20nm due to surface disjoining pressure and to
the Marangoni effect. However, in order to deflect solar light, the shells’
thickness should be comparable to solar wavelengths (i.e. on the order of
400-600 nm). Their initial calculations, considering liquid- based
spherical bubbles, suggest that the resulting raft’s expected mass density
would be <1.5 g/m2, on par with the lightest shield proposed by Angel.
The Space Bubbles proposal envisages using frozen spheres to block some of
the sun's rays. (CREDIT: MIT)Position and stabilization of the raft

While at the L1 Lagrangian point gravitational forces from the Earth and
the Sun cancel out, a wide and thin bubble raft would be significantly
exposed to solar radiation pressure, suggesting that the optimal location
should be identified slightly closer to the Sun, approximately 2.5 Gm from
the earth. An active stabilization mechanism is needed and will have to be
designed, preferably through geometry modification.
Shading capacity

Previous geoengineering research suggests that in order to reverse the
effects of climate change incoming solar radiation should be reduced by
1.8%, even if smaller percentages would be enough for supplementing global
warming mitigations initiatives on Earth. A solar radiation reflection
model will be built and used to determine the optical properties of the
bubble raft, while a deeper analysis with climate models will identify the
desired solar radiation reduction fraction.
This geoengineering idea would feature inflatable bubbles, organized in a
circular shape the size of Brazil, which would sit between the Earth and
the sun, blocking radiation from hitting our planet. (CREDIT: MIT)Space
production and delivery

Possibly a significant advantage of a bubble raft is the possibility of
in-situ assembly using space- based fabrication methods. Bubbles can be
rapidly inflated inside the production unit, then rapidly frozen and
released into zero- pressure and low-temperature space. The coordination of
the process of delivery, raw material transfer, inflation and the
coordination of the resulting bubble rafts will be studied. Moreover, novel
ways of shipping the material from earth will be investigated, including
magnetic accelerators (railgun) as already proposed in the literature.
Maintenance and reversibility

If a bubble raft is no longer needed, sheets of thin spheres are easy to
destroy by breaking their surface equilibrium and collapsing them from
their metastable equilibrium point to a lower energy configuration. This
minimizes debris compared to other proposed approaches, and makes it safer
and more resilient in case of impacts with other objects. The maintenance
of such a fragile shield is a challenge, and an effective replenishment
rate will be studied to ensure the shield maintains its size, together with
strategies to guarantee a smooth end-of-life transition.
The team notes that if we deflect 1.8 per cent of incident solar radiation
before it hits our planet, we could fully reverse today's global warming.
(CREDIT: MIT)Impact on Earth’s climate and ecosystem

Despite the remote location from Earth’s atmosphere, some studies suggest
that complex phenomena may arise on Earth’s climate as a consequence of the
reduction of solar radiation, such as the weakening of extratropical storm
tracks. This aspect will be further investigated with different solar
radiation reduction fractions. Furthermore, a phase-out approach will be
designed, to avoid an Earth’s ecosystem shock of a sudden termination of
the geoengineering program when it will no longer be needed (studies
identify the needed lifetime in a range from 50 to 200 years.
Public policy implications

How to get the most synergies between emission cuts and solar
geoengineering is a public policy problem that needs careful investigation.
Moreover, research will be done on the following topics: how to overcome
political opposition and political fear; how to avoid what has been
referred to as a “moral hazard”; how to make the project economically
sustainable; how to open-source the solution design for a widespread
engagement.

In the next phase of the project, formal analyses and simulations of the
aforementioned topics will be conducted, together with preliminary
laboratory production experimentation. If indeed the bubble raft concept
does turn out as the most valuable solution (from cost and mass density
considerations), further research will be needed for improving the design,
fabricating a test bubble raft in lower orbit, and, if successful, test the
deployment in outer space.

In its largest extent, as discussed by Roger Angel, the system could offset
100% of the effect of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. We believe that
once a technical solution is identified, implementation could happen before
the end of the century, when the most severe consequences of climate change
are currently predicted. In terms of cost, an initial estimate was
suggested by Roger Angel as approximately 0.5% of global GDP over 50 years;
furthering feasibility as proposed here will help us arrive at more
accurate estimates.

In short, researchers believe that advancing feasibility of a solar shield
to the next level could constitute a supplementary plan for a low carbon
transition on Earth–and in any case help us make more informed decisions in
the years to come should geoengineering approaches become urgent.
*Source: Brighter Side of News*

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