Perilous Times
Earth's upper atmosphere shrinking, scientists say
August 27, 2010 - 11:49AM
The upper reaches of Earth's atmosphere are unexpectedly shrinking and
cooling due to lower ultraviolet radiation from the sun, US scientists
said Thursday.
The sun's energy output dropped to unusually low levels from 2007 to
2009, a significantly long spell with virtually no sunspots or solar
storms, according to scientists from the National Center for
Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado.
During that period, the thermosphere, whose altitude ranges from about
55 to 300 miles (90 to 500 kilometers), shrank and contracted from the
sharp drop in ultraviolet radiation, said the study published in the
American Geophysical Union's journal Geophysical Research Letters.
The thermosphere cooled by 74 degrees Fahrenheit (41 Celsius) in 2008
compared to 1996, and shrank by 30 percent, "more than at any time in
the 43-year era of space exploration" the researchers said.
"Our work demonstrates that the solar cycle not only varies on the
typical 11-year time scale, but also can vary from one solar minimum to
another," said study lead author Stanley Solomon.
A narrower, less dense thermosphere is good news for satellites
orbiting Earth, including the International Space Station, since
reduced friction means they can remain aloft longer, said University of
Colorado professor and study co-author Thomas Woods.
"This is good news for those satellites that are actually operating,
but it is also bad because of the thousands of non-operating objects
(debris) remaining in space that could potentially have collisions with
our working satellites," he added.
Woods said the research shows the sun could be going through a period
of relatively low activity, as it did in the early 19th and 20th
centuries.
"If it is indeed similar to certain patterns in the past, then we
expect to have low solar cycles for the next 10 to 30 years," he added.