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http://www.sfgate.com/science/article/Berkeley-experts-study-strengthens-human-link-6101054.php
 



Scientists training their instruments on the skies have caught the world’s 
major greenhouse gas right in the act of warming the planet, researchers 
reported Wednesday, providing the first direct evidence that human activity is 
dangerously altering the environment. 

The instruments captured more than a decade of rising surface temperatures, 
changes that were directly triggered by the atmosphere’s increasing burden of 
carbon dioxide, a team of scientists from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 
and UC Berkeley reported. 

That gas, whose main source is emissions from burning fossil fuels, has long 
been the principal culprit in global warming investigations by the vast 
majority of the world’s climate scientists. Its rising levels in the atmosphere 
have been the basis for increasingly strong warnings about global warming by 
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change , known as the IPCC. 



'A technological coup’ 

“We have known for decades that there must be an effect, but getting a direct 
measurement and isolating the carbon dioxide component are a technological 
coup,” Christopher B. Field , a senior scientist at the Carnegie Institution 
for Science at Stanford University who has led two major IPCC reports, said in 
an e-mail. 

The Berkeley scientists’ study, he said, provides concrete evidence for the 
first time of carbon dioxide’s effect on global warming. 

In November, the U.N. panel issued its fifth and most alarming report on the 
effects of greenhouse gas emissions. It warned that global ice caps are 
melting, Arctic sea ice is diminishing, droughts, heat waves and storms are 
intensifying, coral reefs are dying, and many creatures on land and in the sea 
are migrating toward the poles. 

Documenting warming 

Daniel R. Feldman , a senior scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National 
Laboratory, along with other physicists and engineers at the lab and at UC 
Berkeley, reported Wednesday in the journal Nature on their findings about 
“radiative forcing” — the process through which carbon dioxide and other 
greenhouse gases in the atmosphere can block the Earth from reflecting the 
sun’s radiant energy and actually warm the atmosphere. 



The scientists used an array of extremely precise instruments that the U.S. 
Department of Energy has installed at its climate research facilities near 
Barrow, Alaska, and Lamont, Okla., to document how the warming works. 

In effect, their instruments measured the amount of infrared heat radiation 
coming down to the Earth’s surface from the sun, and the amount of heat 
radiation the Earth emits back up. And when the Berkeley scientists examined 
their data from 2000 to 2010, they found that some of the heat from Earth was 
being blocked by carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and were able to calculate 
how much of that blocked heat was warming the planet. 

Tough to visualize 

The result of the warming, expressed in mathematical and engineering terms, 
appears tiny and difficult to visualize: It amounted to two-tenths of a watt 
per square meter of surface per decade. But the Earth’s surface covers a lot of 
square meters — 510 million square kilometers, in fact, and two-tenths of a 
watt over 10 years can mean a lot of heat for global warming. 



The IPCC’s November report calculates that the Earth’s entire surface has 
already warmed by 1.53degrees Fahrenheit since 1882. 

The Berkeley scientists measured the direct effect of carbon dioxide in the 
atmosphere, and after excluding all the other greenhouse gases and water vapor 
as sources, they reported that levels of the gas had increased in the 
atmosphere by 22 parts per million between 2000 and 2010. 

The effects of carbon dioxide on the Earth’s heat balance have long been 
understood by climate scientists, who have calculated them in their theories of 
climate change. But this is the first time the balance has been confirmed by 
laboratory instruments, according to Feldman and his colleagues. 

“Our findings provide direct confirmation of the IPCC’s findings,” Feldman said 
in an interview. Although he did not discuss the political controversy 
generated by climate-change deniers, he added, “We can hope now that people 
everywhere will be convinced that the IPCC’s reports have been correct.” 

Ken Caldeira , a physicist, climate change expert and also a senior scientist 
at the Carnegie Institution for Science at Stanford who was not connected to 
the Feldman group’s research, said of their calculations that “the underlying 
physics is robust and was never in question.” He said the effects of carbon 
dioxide on global temperatures that the group measured so thoroughly “was not 
questioned by climate scientists.” 
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