By Academy of Mountain Environics; Illustration by Shinod AP
From the Woodpecker volume 2000, brought out by the Academy, an NGO
based in Dehra Dun, in north India. Creating environmentally sustainable
technologies at the local level is its main concern.
There
are some things in nature that have a great capacity to toss back or
reflect a great deal of the sun�s light that falls on them. One of them
is snow. Newly formed snow reflects about 90 per cent of the sunlight
that falls upon it. This means that the sun is powerless to melt clean
snow. And when snow does melt, it is not because of the sunlight. Snow
does not melt on a spring day because of the sun�s heat. It melts
because of the warm air from the sea.
After snow becomes ice, a different problem arises. Clean ice absorbs
about two-thirds of the sunlight that hits it - but ice is transparent
enough for the light to penetrate quite a long way (10 metres or more)
before the absorption takes place.
It is remarkable what
profound results follow from this simple property of transparency to
sunlight. If, instead of penetrating deeply, the light were absorbed in a
shallow surface layer of ice, the summer sun would quickly raise the
temperature of the thin surface layer to melting point. And almost
immediately, the water would run off.
But when the sunlight
penetrates a thick layer of ice before it can be absorbed, it cannot
raise the temperature of the ice to melting point quickly enough. When
the ice is very cold, the whole summer passes before any melting occurs
at all. This is what happens today in the Antarctic, just as it must
have happened in northern Europe during an Ice Age.
Just
imagine, if by magic, ice were suddenly made opaque to light, the
glaciers that exist today would melt away in a few years, raising the
sea level by 60 metres or more. It would flood at least half the world�s
population.
Simply amazing how so much depends on so simple a physical property!
Clouds
toss back about 50 per cent of the light that hits them. Ice and
deserts reflect 35 per cent. Land areas are generally a good deal lower
in reflectivity - usually 10 to 20 per cent, depending on the nature of
vegetation.
Oceans, which cover 71 per cent of the Earth�s
surface, are least reflective of all - only about three per cent. That
is why oceans appear dark in pictures of the Earth taken from the Moon
or from artificial satellites.
When all the sources of
reflection are added together, our planet is found to turn back into
space some 36 per cent of the solar radiation falling upon it.
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