CONTRAILS DO COUNT.Byline: Karen McCowan The Register-Guard Cue "X-Files" music: Maybe we do need to worry about those contrails snaking through the skies overhead. For years, contrail conspiracy theorists have competed with UFO UFO: see unidentified flying objects. (United Functions and Objects) A programming language developed by John Sargeant at Manchester University, U.K. sighters and alien abduction Abduction Balfour, David expecting inheritance, kidnapped by uncle. [Br. Lit.: Kidnapped] Bertram, Henry kidnapped at age five; taken from Scotland. [Br. Lit. survivors for air time on late-night radio's "Art Bell Overnight." Their claim: Those puffy, white jet wakes are no mere water vapor, but chemicals sprayed by the government to (a) kill us, or (b) activate mind control chips secretly implanted in our bodies. Laughable? Why then has NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration. NASA in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration Independent U.S. launched a project to engage ordinary citizens - even schoolkids - in monitoring the jet fuel leavings leav·ings pl.n. Scraps or remains; residue: The turkey leavings were fed to the dog. leavings Noun, pl things left behind unwanted, such as food on a plate ? In a word: climate. NASA scientist Lin Chambers is a principal investigator Noun 1. principal investigator - the scientist in charge of an experiment or research project PI scientist - a person with advanced knowledge of one or more sciences with CERES Ceres, in astronomy Ceres (sîr`ēz), in astronomy, a dwarf planet, the first asteroid to be discovered. It was found on Jan. 1, 1801, by G. Piazzi. , a satellite project that monitors the impact of contrails - essentially man-made clouds - on the Earth's radiant energy radiant energy n. Energy transferred by radiation, especially by an electromagnetic wave. radiant energy Noun systems. Early evidence suggests that lingering contrails affect surface conditions in two ways, particularly in areas below major air corridors. "During the daytime, less sunlight gets to the Earth," Chambers said. "And at nighttime, more heat is trapped so temperatures are warmer." Chambers also directs a program called S'COOL, or "Students' Clouds Observations On-Line," in which thousands of schoolchildren schoolchildren school npl → écoliers mpl; (at secondary school) → collégiens mpl; lycéens mpl schoolchildren school all over the globe chart contrails and cloud formations in their own corner of the sky, then send the data to NASA. The ground-based reporting is designed to verify the contrail tracking conducted by NASA satellites Terra and Aqua, she said. But the agency also made a special appeal on Earth Day - April 22 - for contrail reports from anyone, anywhere. NASA posted a simplified reporting form on its Web site: Observers were to count the contrails they saw that day and classify them into one of three categories: short-lived (dissipating just behind the plane); persistent (lingering for hours); or persistent-spreading (essentially, morphing into cirrus clouds). Perhaps for lack of publicity, the response was "quite disappointing," said Chambers, who is now analyzing that data. "We got maybe 200 reports," she said. "We hope to try again next year and let more people know about it ahead of time." While the Earth Day project was intended as a one-day snapshot of global contrail patterns, NASA welcomes volunteers of any age who'd like to become contrail reporters on an ongoing basis. Prospective cloud watchers can contact the S'COOL Web site, and Chambers will respond from her office at NASA Langley. Wait just a minute. NASA Langley? As in, CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency. (1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy). headquarters? Where her colleagues are Agents Scully and Mulder? Chambers laughed. She gets that a lot. "It's a common mistake," she said. "We're in Hampton, Virginia, near Virginia Beach. We're named Langley not for the town, but after Smithsonian founder Samuel Pierpoint Langley Noun 1. Samuel Pierpoint Langley - United States astronomer and aviation pioneer who invented the bolometer and contributed to the design of early aircraft (1834-1906) Langley ." Yeah, right. And that wasn't an alien spaceship hovering outside my window last night. COUNTING CONTRAILS Here's where to find information on becoming a NASA contrail "reporter." NASA Contrail Project Web site:www.globe.gov/fsl/html/templ.cgi?earthday2004 Project scientist: Lin.H.Chambers@nasa.gov CAPTION(S): NASA is studying contrails such as these seen over the Willamette Valley last summer. |
|
||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion