The Reality of Climate Change: 10 Myths Busted
Jeanna Bryner, LiveScience Managing Editor
Date: 04 April 2012 Time: 08:42 AM ET
Credit: Markus Reugels, LiquidArt
Dynamic Earth
Earth is a dynamic sphere and, it turns out, so is the planet's climate,
otherwise known as the long-term trend of global weather conditions.
It's no wonder questions and myths abound about what exactly is going on
in the atmosphere, in the oceans and on land. How can we tell our orb
is actually warming and whether humans are to blame? Here's a look at
what scientists know and don't know about some seemingly murky
statements on Earth's climate. [50 Amazing Facts About Earth]
The Reality of Climate Change: 10 Myths Busted
Jeanna Bryner, LiveScience Managing Editor
Date: 04 April 2012 Time: 08:42 AM ET
Credit:
Data courtesy of the Atmospheric Sciences Data Center and the CERES
Science Team at NASA Langley Research Center. Images courtesy of Tom
Bridgman, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization
Studio.
Climate has changed before
Myth:
Even before SUVs and other greenhouse-gas spewing technologies, Earth's
climate was changing, so humans can't be responsible for today's global
warming.
Science: Climate changes in the past suggest that our climate reacts to energy input and output, such that if the planet accumulates more heat than it gives off global temperatures will rise. It's the driver of this heat imbalance that differs.
Currently, CO2 is imposing an energy imbalance due to the enhanced greenhouse effect. Past climate change actually provides evidence for our climate's sensitivity to CO2.
(Image left: heat given off by Earth's surface and atmosphere; Right: sunlight reflected back out to space.)
Science: Climate changes in the past suggest that our climate reacts to energy input and output, such that if the planet accumulates more heat than it gives off global temperatures will rise. It's the driver of this heat imbalance that differs.
Currently, CO2 is imposing an energy imbalance due to the enhanced greenhouse effect. Past climate change actually provides evidence for our climate's sensitivity to CO2.
(Image left: heat given off by Earth's surface and atmosphere; Right: sunlight reflected back out to space.)
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