Recent Stories
- Unborn babies 'practise' facial expressions in the womb
- Lancaster leads the way in cyber security bursary scheme
- Physicists gain insight into the UK's biggest killer
- Engineering students make finals of national start-up business competition
- Social media plagued by privacy problems, say researchers
- Lancaster Environment Centre conducts roadside pollution research for BBC
- Lancaster set to receive funding boost to stimulate UK's economy
- Billion-year-old water could hold clues to life on Earth and Mars
- How do we find out about cyber criminals?
- First, carbon footprints... now you can calculate your 'nitrogen footprint'
Research Contradicts Climate Change Sceptics
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Scientists from Lancaster and Durham Universities have challenged the controversial idea that global warming is caused by cosmic rays rather than by human activity.
Climate change sceptics argue that changes in cosmic rays coming to Earth determine cloudiness and temperature, leading to global warming. This theory has the radical implication that cutting carbon emissions is futile since climate change is not caused by burning fossil fuels.
But this new research casts doubt on the theory after finding no evidence of a link between the ionizing cosmic rays and the production of low cloud cover.
Emeritus Professor of Physics Terry Sloan of Lancaster University, who carried out the research with Emeritus Professor Arnold Wolfendale at Durham, said: "This is of vast significance because if the sceptics are right, it would mean we're wasting our time trying to cut greenhouse gases. But we couldn't find the link they were proposing which means we are right to be cutting carbon emissions."
The cosmic ray theory was developed by Danish scientist Dr Henrik Svensmark at the Danish National Space Centre (DNSC) and featured in a controversial Channel 4 documentary "The Great Global Warming Swindle", broadcast last year, which suggested that global warming was due to a decrease in cosmic rays over the last century. Cosmic rays are deflected away from Earth by our planet's magnetic field, and by the solar wind - streams of electrically charged particles emanating from the Sun. Dr Svensmark suggested that when the solar wind is strong, the planet warms up because fewer clouds are produced and more of the sun's heat reaches the surface.
Prof Sloan's team investigated the link by looking for times and places on Earth which had documented weak or strong cosmic ray arrivals, and seeing if that affected the cloudiness - but they found no significant link.
Prof Sloan said: "I'm not an environmental scientist, I'm a particle physicist but I got interested in global warming and I watched the documentary. I was interested in the Danish claim because it's of such vast importance. The implication is that we shouldn't do anything about climate change - you just wait for the sun to come back to its normal state. I went into this with an open mind but we found no evidence for the Danish hypothesis. What we have found is that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has got it right - we need to cut carbon emissions."
The IPCC last year concluded that since temperatures began rising rapidly in the 1970s, the contribution of greenhouse gas emissions has outweighed that of solar activity by a factor of 13 to one.
The research is published in the Institute of Physics' Environmental Research Letters.
Fri 04 April 2008
Latest News
Unborn babies 'practise' facial expressions in the womb
Researchers from Durham and Lancaster Universities suggest that a foetus's ability to show a "pain" facial expression is a developmental process which could potentially give doctors another index of the health of a foetus.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Mon 17 June 2013
Lancaster leads the way in cyber security bursary scheme
Lancaster is one of four UK universities selected to take part in an 'industry first' sponsorship initiative encouraging students to take up Masters-level cyber security degrees.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Mon 10 June 2013
Physicists gain insight into the UK's biggest killer
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the UK, accounting for a third of all fatalities through illnesses such as stroke and heart disease.
Story supplied by LU Press Office
Wed 29 May 2013
Engineering students make finals of national start-up business competition
Engineering students Scott Nash, Daniel Richardson and Aaron Aboshio have won the northern heat of the Youth Entrepreneurs Scheme 'Engineering YES' competition for their spin-out renewable energy company Atlantis.
Thu 23 May 2013