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Judi Lynn

(160,515 posts)
Mon Jun 6, 2022, 11:03 PM Jun 2022

Is human pollution causing clouds to form near the edge of space?

Noctilucent clouds, which glow after sunset, are the highest known clouds in Earth’s atmosphere

Stuart Clark
@DrStuClark
Mon 6 Jun 2022 01.00 EDT

Late spring/early summer in the northern hemisphere is a good time to look for noctilucent clouds. Roughly translated from Latin, noctilucent means “night shine”, which is a good description of these beautiful cloud formations. They can be seen glowing an electric blue colour against the darkening western sky about 30 minutes after the sun sets.

Noctilucent clouds are the highest known clouds in Earth’s atmosphere, existing at an altitude of about 80km, which is virtually the edge of space. The Kármán line, which marks the boundary between the atmosphere and outer space, is defined as being 100km in altitude.

It is not clear how noctilucent clouds form. As with all clouds, water vapour must condense around a “nucleus”, usually a dust grain. The problem is understanding how such material gets that high in the tenuous upper levels of the atmosphere. It has been suggested that the disintegration of meteors produces the dust.

Another possibility is that human-made pollutants reaching the upper atmosphere are acting as nuclei, enhancing the effect over recent centuries. If industrial pollution is to blame, this may explain why there appears to have been no reported sightings of noctilucent clouds before 1885.

More:
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2022/jun/06/is-human-pollution-causing-clouds-to-form-near-the-edge-of-space

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Is human pollution causing clouds to form near the edge of space? (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jun 2022 OP
I read this week that tires put more particulates into the atmosphere than industrial pollution. captain queeg Jun 2022 #1

captain queeg

(10,157 posts)
1. I read this week that tires put more particulates into the atmosphere than industrial pollution.
Mon Jun 6, 2022, 11:32 PM
Jun 2022

Makes sense, ever wonder where the rubber goes as your tires weat out? Multiply that by billions. Conservation of mass.

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