Emissions could make Earth uninhabitable
February 27, 2016, by Tim Radford
Baked
earth caused by severe water shortage in Senegal, West
Africa.Image: United
Nations Photo via
Flickr
Researchers
predict that the hothouse effect of runaway greenhouse gases would
ultimately boil our planet dry and make it incapable of sustaining
life.
LONDON,
27 February, 2016 –
Greenhouse gases could tip the Earth – or at least a planet like
Earth, orbiting a star very like the Sun – into a runaway
greenhouse effect, according to new research.
The
new hothouse planet would become increasingly steamy, and then start
to lose its oceans to interplanetary space. Over time, it would
become completely dry, stay at a temperature at least 60°C hotter
than it is now, and remain completely uninhabitable, even if
greenhouse gas levels could be reduced.
Max
Popp, postdoctoral researcher in climate instabilities at the Max
Planck Institute for Meteorology,
Germany, has been playing with models of clouds, sunlight, carbon
dioxide and oceans for a while now.
Such
research could not only help with a deeper understanding of global
warming and climate change as a consequence of the human combustion
of fossil fuels, but also with the possible dynamics of other
planets, orbiting distant stars.
Baked to a crisp
He
and colleagues report
in Nature Communications that
there may be no need to wait five billion years until the Sun becomes
a Red Giant and bakes the inner planets to a set of crisps.
Notionally,
humans could achieve much the same effect by simply quadrupling the
proportions of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to around 1,520 parts
per million, and possibly as little as 1,120 ppm.
Right
now, the ratio of CO2 has risen from 280 ppm to 400 ppm, and
planetary average temperatures have risen by 1°C. So there is still
a long way to go.
But,
until now, researchers have wondered whether carbon dioxide alone
could ever raise temperatures
high enough to boil a planet dry.
The Popp study suggests that it could − and in much lower
proportions than others have suggested
“A
planet in this state would eventually become
uninhabitable as all
water is lost to space”
Venus,
covered in clouds of sulphuric acid and with a surface hot enough to
melt lead, has been proposed as a victim of the runaway greenhouse
effect.
Research
such as this is a bit like a computer game: compose an ideal planet,
much like Earth, and run it through a series of extreme tests.
Dr
Popp and his team simplified their Earth-like planet as much as they
could. They started with a world covered entirely by ocean, and then
eliminated the ice caps.
They
made it 6°C on average warmer than it is now – and climate models
predict that a 6°C planetary average temperature rise is possible
under a business-as-usual emissions scenario – and then let the
greenhouse gases start to build up.
Other researchers have hypothesised that clouds would also build up, and reflect sunlight away from Earth, to contain the warming.
But
this team found a different effect: water vapour would increase in
the atmosphere, which would in any case expand. As the water vapour
climbed ever higher, it would become increasingly vulnerable to
radiation.
This
would break up H2O into hydrogen and oxygen. Hydrogen, being the
lightest of the elements, would start to ooze away into space. And
without hydrogen, there is no water.
Increasingly impossible
By
the time that started to happen, this laboratory aqua-planet would be
in a moist greenhouse state. Sea surface temperatures would be at
least 50 to 70°C higher than now – that is, at the temperature
needed to pasteurise milk – and life would become increasingly
impossible.
Ominously,
even if somehow the CO2 levels could be lowered dramatically,
the planet would stay in this steam bath condition, increasingly
parched. And the clouds above would simply trap the heat and make
things worse.
“A
planet in this state would eventually become uninhabitable as all
water is lost to space,” the authors say.
They
add: “To conclude, we have demonstrated with a state-of-the-art
climate model that a water-rich planet might lose its habitability as
readily by CO2 forcing as by increased solar forcing through a
transition to a Moist Greenhouse and the implied long-term loss of
hydrogen.” – Climate
News Network
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