Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Energy News .




FIRE STORM
Wildfires may contribute more to global warming than previously predicted
by Staff Writers
Los Alamos NM (SPX) Jul 11, 2013


Haze of smoke emanating from the 2011 Las Conchas, NM fire.

Wildfires produce a witch's brew of carbon-containing particles, as anyone downwind of a forest fire can attest. A range of fine carbonaceous particles rising high into the air significantly degrade air quality, damaging human and wildlife health, and interacting with sunlight to affect climate. But measurements taken during the 2011 Las Conchas fire near Los Alamos National Laboratory show that the actual carbon-containing particles emitted by fires are very different than those used in current computer models, providing the potential for inaccuracy in current climate-modeling results.

"We've found that substances resembling tar balls dominate, and even the soot is coated by organics that focus sunlight," said senior laboratory scientist Manvendra Dubey, "Both components can potentially increase climate warming by increased light absorption."

The Las Conchas fire emissions findings underscore the need to provide a framework to include realistic representation of carbonaceous aerosols in climate model, the researchers say. They suggest that fire emissions could contribute a lot more to the observed climate warming than current estimates show.

"The fact that we are experiencing more fires and that climate change may increase fire frequency underscores the need to include these specialized particles in the computer models, and our results show how this can be done," Dubey said.

Aerosol samples revealed "tar balls" in the skies
Conventional wisdom is that the fire-driven particles contain black carbon or soot that absorbs sunlight to warm the climate, and organic carbon or smoke that reflects sunlight to cool the climate. But in a paper just published in Nature Communications the scientists from Los Alamos and Michigan Technological University analyzed the morphology and composition of the specific aerosols emitted by the Las Conchas fire.

Las Conchas, which started June 26, 2011, was the largest fire in NM history at the time, burning 245 square miles. Immediately after Los Alamos National Laboratory reopened to scientists and staff, the team set up an extensive aerosol sampling system to monitor the smoke from the smoldering fire for more than 10 days.

High-tech tools enable analysis of smoke samples
Dubey, along with postdoctoral fellow Allison Aiken and post-bachelor's student Kyle Gorkowski, coordinated with Michigan Tech professor Claudio Mazzoleni (a former Los Alamos Director's fellow) and graduate student Swarup China to perform this study.

The team used field-emission scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive X ray spectroscopy to analyze the aerosol samples and determined that spherical carbonaceous particles called tar balls were 10 times more abundant than soot.

Furthermore, the bare soot particles, which are composite porous fractal structures made of tiny spherical carbon, are modified significantly by the organics emitted by the fire. About 96 percent of the soot from the fire is coated by other organics substances, with 50 percent being totally coated. Furthermore, the complexity of the soot can be categorized into 4 morphological structures as "embedded," "partly coated," "with inclusions" and "bare."

What was missing from the modeling and why it matters
Why is this important for climate? Dubey noted that, "Most climate assessment models treat fire emissions as a mixture of pure soot and organic carbon aerosols that offset the respective warming and cooling effects of one another on climate. However Las Conchas results show that tar balls exceed soot by a factor of 10 and the soot gets coated by organics in fire emissions, each resulting in more of a warming effect than is currently assumed."

"Tar balls can absorb sunlight at shorter blue and ultraviolet wavelengths (also called brown carbon due to the color) and can cause substantial warming," he said. "Furthermore, organic coatings on soot act like lenses that focus sunlight, amplifying the absorption and warming by soot by a factor of 2 or more. This has a huge impact on how they should be treated in computer models."

This experimental research was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science. Nature Communications.

.


Related Links
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Forest and Wild Fires - News, Science and Technology






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FIRE STORM
Indonesia firefighters 'overwhelmed' by Sumatra blazes
Jakarta (AFP) June 21, 2013
Firefighters battling blazes on Indonesia's Sumatra island that have cloaked Singapore in record-breaking levels of smog are "overwhelmed" and unable to cope, an official said Friday. "We have been fighting fires 24 hours a day for two weeks," Ahmad Saerozi, the head of the natural resources conservation agency in Riau province, where the fires are centred, told AFP. "We are overwhelmed ... read more


FIRE STORM
Energy-poor Jordan faces explosive electricity hikes

Toronto struggles to regain power after storm

French ex-minister blames energy lobbies for sacking

Remote Norway islands added to national electric grid after blackout

FIRE STORM
Treating oil spills with chemical dispersants: Is the cure worse than the ailment?

Big quakes trigger tremors at US oil and gas sites

Global recovery, China to pull oil demand in 2014: IEA

India rebukes Bhutan with fuel subsidy cut: report

FIRE STORM
Wind power does not strongly affect greater prairie chickens

UAE's Masdar eyeing more Britain offshore wind investments

Mafia turning to wind farms to launder money

O2 sells third wind farm to IKEA

FIRE STORM
JinkoSolar Donates Solar Modules Fighting Against HIV/AIDs in Uganda

Scientists solve titanic puzzle of popular photocatalyst

German energy minister hails 'success' of solar subsidy reforms

City of Deming and Its Residents benefit from Solar Power

FIRE STORM
Fukushima leaking radioactive water into sea?

Toxic radiation again in groundwater at Fukushima: TEPCO

Japan nuclear operators ask to restart reactors

S. Korean nuclear reactor shuts down

FIRE STORM
Japan, China and South Korea account for 84 percent of the macroalgae patents

Bacteria from Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia conceal bioplastic

Gasification method turns forest residues to biofuel with less than a euro per liter

Newly developed medium may be useful for human health, biofuel production, more

FIRE STORM
China's space tracking ship Yuanwang-5 berths at Jakarta for replenishment

China plans to launch Tiangong-2 space lab around 2015

Twilight for Tiangong

China calls for international cooperation in manned space program

FIRE STORM
Climate change could mean business opportunities, Britain says

Identifying climate impact hotspots across sectors

Pakistan to miss out on climate change funding?

Researchers discover global warming may affect microbe survival




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement