I am not sure I understand this.
Are you saying solar absorptance of the air in the microscopic bubbles
are less than 0.0001?
Hashem
Quoting Russell Seitz <
russel...@gmail.com>:
> "If non-absorbing HGMs could be manufactured, and if they could be
> transported and distributed without contamination by dark substances, they
> could cool the climate. "
>
> I agree, especially since in contrast to the floating glass microspheres
> Webster and Warren reject, the solar radiation absorbance of the air in
> microscopic bubbles is roughly four orders of magnitude smaller than that
> of glass.
> On Saturday, October 8, 2022 at 9:51:11 AM UTC-4 Alan Robock wrote:
>
>> Webster, M. A., & Warren, S. G. (2022). Regional geoengineering using tiny
>> glass bubbles would accelerate the loss of Arctic sea ice. *Earth's
>> Future*, 10, e2022EF002815.
https://doi.org/10.1029/2022EF002815
>>
>>
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2022EF002815
>>
>> *Abstract*
>> Arctic sea ice might be preserved if its albedo could be increased.
>> To this end, it has been proposed to spread hollow glass microspheres
>> (HGMs) over the ice. We assess the radiative forcing (RF) that would
>> result, by considering the areal coverages and spectral albedos of eight
>> representative surface types, as well as the incident solar radiation,
>> cloud properties, and spectral radiative properties of HGMs.
>> HGMs can raise the albedo of new ice, but new ice occurs in autumn
>> and winter when there is little sunlight. In spring the ice is covered by
>> high-albedo, thick snow. In summer the sunlight is intense, and the snow
>> melts, so a substantial area is covered by dark ponds of meltwater, which
>> could be an attractive target for attempted brightening. However, prior
>> studies show that wind blows HGMs to the pond edges.
>> A thin layer of HGMs has about 10% absorptance for solar radiation,
>> so HGMs would darken any surfaces with albedo >0.61, such as snow-covered
>> ice. The net result is the opposite of what was intended: spreading HGMs
>> would warm the Arctic climate and speed sea-ice loss.
>> If non-absorbing HGMs could be manufactured, and if they could be
>> transported and distributed without contamination by dark substances, they
>> could cool the climate. The maximum benefit would be achieved by
>> distribution during the month of May, resulting in an annual average RF for
>> the Arctic Ocean of -3 Wm-2 if 360 megatons of HGMs were spread onto the
>> ice annually.
>>
>>
>