Set as Homepage - Add to Favorites

成人午夜福利A视频-成人午夜福利剧场-成人午夜福利免费-成人午夜福利免费视频-成人午夜福利片-成人午夜福利视

【секс порнографии я кончаю】Enter to watch online.How climate change has shifted Earth's axis

Climate 101is a Mashable series that answers provoking and секс порнографии я кончаюsalient questions about Earth’s warming climate.


Greenland is purging ice into the ocean.

And Earth noticed.

A strange impact of the continuously warming climate is that colossal amounts of ice melting into the planet's oceans have played a prominent role in moving Earth's axis — the invisible line Earth rotates around. As the planet warms, ice from glaciers and ice sheets migrates from land into the sea (as water), which majorly redistributes weight on the globe. This phenomenon, which scientists recently found more evidence for, ultimately shifts the planet's axis, something scientists call "polar drift."

"The Earth is like a spinning top, and if you put more mass on one side or the other, the axis of rotation is going to shift slightly," explained Isabella Velicogna, a professor of earth system sciences at the University of California, Irvine, and a researcher at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

(There's no need to panic: The slight nudge, while a change to Earth's axis, won't impact life on the planet, though the melting ice has the added deleterious effect of driving significant sea level rise. It's normal for Earth's axis to drift around, and the shifts are small compared to the size of the planet. For example, the axis only drifted some four inches a year during the 20th century.)

In 2016, NASA researchers used satellite observations to show that major ice loss (particularly from Greenland) played a significant role in nudging Earth's axis eastward, starting around 2000. (The below illustration shows the phenomenon.) In the new research, recently published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, scientists found Earth's axis started its eastward swing (away from the south) a little earlier, in the 1990s.

Mashable Light Speed Want more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories? Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter. By clicking Sign Me Up, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Thanks for signing up!

"The faster ice melting under global warming was the most likely cause of the directional change of the polar drift in the 1990s," Shanshan Deng, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and an author of the new study, said in a statement.

Mashable ImageA graphic showing Earth's axis' eastward shift after around 2000. Credit: nasa / Jpl / caltech Mashable ImageAn image of NASA's GRACE satellites, which measure mass from Earth's ice sheets,  flying over Greenland. Credit: nasa / Jpl

This latest research adds more compelling evidence to climate change's role in moving Earth's axis. "This study confirms previous studies that have shown the contribution of the melting of the Greenland ice sheets to the shift of Earth’s rotation axis," said UC Irvine's Velicogna, who was not involved in the new research. "It shows once again another impact of the melting of ice sheets on the earth system."

Water is profoundly heavy. A cubic meter of water, around the size of a washing machine, weighs one tonne (a little more than a U.S. ton). Today, Greenland, which is driving a significant amount of axis shift, is losing some 268 billion metric tons (also called a "gigaton") of ice into the ocean each year.

That's a lot of redistributed weight. "We’re melting so much that it can have an effect on the axis," emphasized Velicogna.

Though Greenland and other melting glaciers and ice sheets are now increasingly important players in moving Earth's axis, other factors are still at play, too. Earth scientists know that slowly circulating rock deep inside the planet's mantle shifts mass around the planet (exactly how much is still uncertain and an active area of research). So do the great masses of water naturally stored underground (and also pumped out by humans), along with land "rebounding" back up after tremendously heavy glaciers melt away.

In the coming years, decades, and beyond, climate scientists expect Earth to continue warming as heat-trapping carbon levels in the atmosphere rise. That will inevitably result in more prodigious melting from Greenland and other glaciers. This doesn't just mean freshly redistributed water will further influence Earth's axis. It also portends accelerated sea level rise. "The melting of the ice sheets and the glaciers and ice caps has been larger year after year in recent decades and its contribution to rising sea level will affect highly populated coastal regions around the planet," said Velicogna. (Sea levels have risen by some eight to nine inchessince the late 1800s, and a conservative United Nations estimate is sea levels will rise by another one to two feetby the century's end. In actuality, this could be more like two or three feet, or even more.)

But that's not all. When glaciated lands melt they lose mass and, consequently, some of their gravitational pull. This means ocean water is then tugged towards other places, ultimately resulting in even more sea level rise inregions far from areas like Greenland or Antarctica. "There’s definitely global winners and losers due to these changes," explained Matthew Hoffman, a glaciologist and computer scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory who had no role in the new research. "Some cities will be hit harder if West Antarctica collapses relative to other cities," he said, referencing the accelerated melting and potential collapse of colossal Antarctic glaciers. Cities along the eastern U.S. coastline are some of these vulnerable places.

Mashable ImageSea level rise since 1900. Credit: nasa

Earth's axis isn't just influenced by the happenings on the planet. Over the course of thousands of years, the sun and other objects in our solar system can cause Earth to wobble (called Milankovitch Cycles), and result in major climatic changes (like a significantly hotter northern or southern hemisphere). But today, changes to Earth's axis are largely due to great masses of melting ice.

"It sounds fantastical," said Hoffman. But, he noted, it's real.

Related Video: Even the 'optimistic' climate change forecast is catastrophic

0.1298s , 10034.6875 kb

Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【секс порнографии я кончаю】Enter to watch online.How climate change has shifted Earth's axis,  

Sitemap

Top 主站蜘蛛池模板: 日韩无在线播放 | 色色色综合网 | 成人三级网址 | 日韩欧美亚洲中文乱码 | 五月丁香在线视频 | 操操操干干干 | 无码不卡播放 | 四房色播五月婷婷 | 日韩欧美无砖专区 | 在线无码不卡免费 | 日韩精品秘a在 | 午夜无码在线观看 | 91亚洲精品国偷拍 | 成人欧美图片国产 | 五月亭亭六月丁香 | 日韩剧情片电影免费 | 日韩亚洲欧美在线观 | 日韩中文 | 天天干夜夜肏 | 午夜免费成人电影 | 免费看国产三级片 | 日韩电影免费在线 | 国模吧无码 | 日韩欧美亚欧在线视频 | 久草资源网 | 免费三级在线观看 | 四虎地址| 国产一级内射视频 | 精品国产乱码 | 国产成人片在线观看 | 男女交配视频网站 | 伊人A片 | 日韩欧美中文字幕不卡 | 亚洲av卡一卡二 | 日韩射吧 | 国产第20页 | 国产久久一区 | 五月激情综合网 | 福利在线视频导航 | 成人午夜小电影 | 国产免费无码 |