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    Could Space Mirrors Stop Global Warming?

    The record-breaking temperatures of the past few years are getting more people thinking about bigger solutions to climate change. Ideas once thought of as wacky are now receiving careful consideration, including an idea that sounds straight out of science fiction: cooling the earth by launching reflective mirrors into space.

    Lowell Wood of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory proposed a giant space mirror in the early 2000s, though he cautioned that the mirror should be considered only as a measure of last resort. Why? Because the mirror would have to have an area of 600,000 square miles – a slightly smaller area than Greenland – and launching something that big would be prohibitively expensive. Another option: billions of smaller mirrors. Roger Angel, researcher and optics expert at the University of Arizona, proposed that idea in 2006.

    In either case, the mirror or mirrors would orbit at Lagrange point L1, a gravitationally stable point between the Earth and the sun that's about four times the distance from the Earth to the moon. The mirrors would barely be visible from Earth and would block just 1 percent to 2 percent of the sun's light, but that would be enough, advocates of the schemes say, to cool the planet. Even with Angel's plan, the current cost of launching a trillion mirrors would be $10,000 per pound, or, in total, 26 times more than the current U.S. national debt.

    A nightmare to maintain

    Another option was proposed in 2002 by space consulting firm Star Technology and Research. Star's experts calculated that a network of steerable space mirrors orbiting Earth's equator, like one of the rings of Saturn, could lower the average air temperature by up to 3 degrees Celsius (37 degrees Fahrenheit) while simultaneously generating power from onboard solar panels and beaming it to Earth.

    But such an approach could generate problems. Report author and Star Technology president Jerome Pearson calculated it would take 5 million spacecraft to achieve the desired result, and even if each individual craft could last 100 years, that means 137 ships would have to be replaced or repaired per day. And the craft would produce "stars" that would be visible from the ground. (Pearson's other hypothetical proposal, a ring of reflective rocks in the same position, would light the night sky with the equivalent of 12 full moons.)

    Even if a space mirror scheme was technically and financially feasible, it could result in unintended consequences, like drought. A recent study from the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology added the effect of space mirrors to four climate models. In each model, the space shades lowered the average global temperature to preindustrial levels, but unevenly. The poles warmed while the tropics cooled, fewer clouds formed, and the planet received less rainfall, especially in the Americas and northern Eurasia.

    A short-term solution?

    Such a plan also would do nothing about ocean acidification and little about sea-level rise, since sea levels respond slowly to changes in Earth's temperature. A space mirror could offset air temperature warming until at least 2070, according to a 2010 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper, but the oceans would still rise by two feet in that time.

    Aggressive carbon reductions coupled with a space reflector could limit sea level rise to one foot by 2100, and stopping it completely would require a mirror that was constantly getting larger and more efficient at blocking sunlight.

    While a giant space mirror isn't currently possible with today's tools, technology is in fact catching up to science fiction, and the idea seems less outlandish than it did a decade ago. Will an enormous mirror someday be the world's last hope to stop global warming? Only time will tell.

    This story was provided by InnovationNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow InnovationNewsDaily on Twitter @News_Innovation, or on Facebook.

    Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
     

    448 comments

    • Rat Carcass  •  Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  •  23 hrs ago
      It seemed funny on The Simpsons when Montgomery Burns did it. That was because it didn't occur to us someone might actually try to do it. Scary stuff.
      • Dave Olson 12 hrs ago
        How about just unrolling a giant sheet of reflective Reynold's aluminum foil over the Pacific Ocean? The water doesn't reflect much heat by itself.
      • Patrick 15 hrs ago
        Oh deary dear! The UN, controlling when we can and can't see the sun! Heavens to murgatroid! What about countries that aren't members of the UN? Will they be cooked or frozen? First, I personally am not scared because none of this is going to happen during my lifetime. But like I suggested previously in this thread, IF it gets to the point where we need to hang venetian blinds in space to keep from being cooked in our back yards and there's some "corrupt international group like the UN" who is capable of hanging those venetian blinds, I'd say more power to them!
      • CaptureAlive 16 hrs ago
        Patrick, if the idea of a corrupt international group like the UN in charge of when you get to see the sun, and how much sun you get, doesn't scare you, then I have no idea what might actually scare you.
    • Snorri Sturluson  •  22 hrs ago
      Space mirrors? The first bad snow storm or drought and the lawyers will be suing everyone who can spell "space mirrors".
    • BK  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      they did this in futurama, it didnt work well
    • Dave Wilson  •  16 hrs ago
      stop making cars
      • Red White and So Blue 10 hrs ago
        We already have. Now all you have to do is convince the Germans, Japanese, and Koreans and you're dream world will surely blossom. Whew!
    • Jim M  •  2 days 21 hrs ago
      Like kids with tinker toys. What could possibly go wrong with plans like this?
      • carl 17 hrs ago
        tom, you are stupid
      • tom 1 day 8 hrs ago
        Maybe switching from fossil fuel from carbon fuel would be the cheapest and best solution after all.
      • tom 1 day 8 hrs ago
        Conservatives never see the problem if it costs business money to fix. Ignoring the problem is their solution. Stupid is as stupid does.
        Stupid is as stupid does
    • john  •  Charlotte, North Carolina  •  15 hrs ago
      How to stop a $cam - don't buy into it.
      A careful look at global warming, as a topic, shows that there is a great deal of disagreement about the facts and substance of climate change. Those who blame man for climate change often disagree about what facts lead them to that conclusion. Those who hold man totally innocent of it often ignore established facts. There is little to no objective evidence that man is the cause, nor that the effects will be catastrophic. Global warming “facts” are notoriously hard to come by. Global temperature changes from past millennia, according to available data, were often severe and rapid, long before man supposedly had any impact at all. That is, the current climate change is not as unusual as some alarmists would like to believe. Recent recorded history mentions times of noticeable global warming and cooling, long before man had any ability to produce industrial emissions.
      Environmental issues are important, but they are not the most important questions facing mankind. We should not allow politically driven hysteria to dominate our view of the environment. (Ref : gotquestions.org)
    • Red White and So Blue  •  10 hrs ago
      Asking members of congress to remain silent would do so much more for global warming than "space mirrors," and for the overall benefit of the U.S. for that matter.
    • JC  •  New York, New York  •  18 hrs ago
      How about painting certain regions of Earth white to reflect more rays back out to space? Not sure how much impact this will have, but at least it seems like a cheaper solution.
      • Brian 16 hrs ago
        A political note: this is one of those things the Conservatives like to make fun of... Although it is an excellent, very conservative way to increase cooling -- including cooling the house you live in.
      • Tyler 18 hrs ago
        Paint roof tops white in certain area's or at least a lighter color. Like places when they tar and shingle roofs,paint the shingles white or even make them white so the heat is reflected. Seriously.
    • Stepup2themike  •  12 hrs ago
      Why not place the mirror (or a UV filter maybe?) closer to the sun- closer it gets to it the smaller it would need to be- making it less prohibitively expensive.
    • Young (but not) Dumb  •  16 hrs ago
      Astronaut's would be able to comb their hair and check their teeth for bits of food on the way by while orbiting with these giant mirrors. That alone makes this a worthy project to borrow money from the Chinese for. To battle phoney man made global warming...? not so much.
    • Red White and So Blue  •  10 hrs ago
      Answer: No. However, they have enormous potential for laser-beam weapons technology for either defensive or offensive use. If you ever hear that we've sent up a "space-mirror" to help combat global warming, you can rest assured that its a covert military mission. Good for us.
    • mike  •  Los Angeles, California  •  20 hrs ago
      no
    • mike  •  Los Angeles, California  •  20 hrs ago
      no
    • IrvS  •  1 day 5 hrs ago
      Increasing atmospheric reflectance would be a 'hellofalot' more practical.
      Jet contrails have a measurable cooling effect, (Ref. published studies in the '70's).
      We could 'kill two birds with one stone' by using quicklime (finest powder known
      on hydration), to both reflect light and fight acid rain in the north-east.
      Would annucleate water droplets to form high cloud as well as reduce
      acidity of rainfall.
      Distribution by commercial flights would cost maybe two seats worth of loading.
      • C Yarkis 21 hrs ago
        Some people already think that material is being sprayed in the air to reflect light and heat. Does anybody know what HARP does?? I mean outside of guessing, misinformation, and self informed people.
    • SilverWing  •  1 day 20 hrs ago
      Lets design, build and send into orbit a giant lampshade to put over the sun.
    • Hello  •  2 days 17 hrs ago
      Where's Mr. Burns when you need him.
    • desert  •  New Kensington, Pennsylvania  •  2 days 15 hrs ago
      What? A difference of 3 degrees Celsius equal to 37 degrees Fahrenheit? I know 3C=37F, but a difference of 3C = a difference of 3X9/5 F, which is less than 6F.
      We are so stubbornly stuck in the old measurement systems while the rest of the world has adopted the metric systems.
    • now  •  Liberty, New York  •  1 day 8 hrs ago
      Once China becomes the top CO2 producer, the AGW issue will then be ignored.
    • WardV  •  3 days ago
      Ya know, these guys are truly unbelievable!!!!!!
    • arlan  •  Indianapolis, Indiana  •  1 day 6 hrs ago
      stupid