logo
Scientists show how smarter flight decisions could help fight climate change

Scientists show how smarter flight decisions could help fight climate change

Yahooa day ago
A team of University of California (UC) researchers say they have developed a tool that could help steer the aviation sector toward making smarter decisions when it comes to climate-related impacts.
The Global Warming per Activity tool, highlighted Wednesday in the journal Nature, measures how long and how strongly each aviation activity affects the atmosphere — whether that activity lasts hours or a century.
The scientists also quantified uncertainty in every component, enabling users to assess risk by calculating the probability that a given tradeoff would help mitigate warming.
'This new decision tool uses the information to provide accurate risk quantification for climate tradeoff decisions,' lead author Michael Prather, a professor of Earth system science at UC Irvine, said in a statement.
For example, airlines could decide to reroute flights to avoid conditions that generate contrails — the line-shaped vapor trails produced by engine exhaust — but in doing so, they might need to consume more fuel.
If the contrails were reduced sufficiently, however, there could be a net positive gain for the climate, according to the study.
In general, civil aviation contributes to global warming via carbon dioxide from fuels, nitrogen oxides that impact ozone and methane levels, and the creation of lingering contrails. Although each pollution source plays a role in trapping atmospheric heat, efforts to reduce one offender typically increase another.
Using the new metric, the scientists determined that if aviation choices led to even a 3 percent to 5 percent decrease in contrails or in nitrogen oxide emissions, these declines could outweigh a 1 percent surge in carbon dioxide emissions over a 100-year period.
Careful strategies that might increase fuel usage, they observed, could therefore bring a potential reduction in the long-term climate impacts of flying. The researchers stressed, however, that they considered only climate change tradeoffs and not economic costs.
Nonetheless, they touted their method for its abilities to empower airlines and regulators to make smarter decisions, with more accurate, activity-based comparisons.
By quantifying the probability of a positive climate outcome, the authors said they aimed to provide a way to evaluate climate tradeoffs with confidence and equip policymakers with clearer insight into the consequences of their actions.
The tool could also be applicable to climate-related decisions made in other industries, such as shipping, agriculture or manufacturing, the researchers noted.
'This is a win for both science and society,' Prather said. 'Our findings show that we don't have to choose between reducing carbon emissions and tackling other warming pollutants. We can find a balance that leads to meaningful progress.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

MIT student builds pocket-sized 3D printer that uses light to create objects in secs
MIT student builds pocket-sized 3D printer that uses light to create objects in secs

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

MIT student builds pocket-sized 3D printer that uses light to create objects in secs

Researchers have developed photonic devices that manipulate light to enable innovative applications, like pocket-sized 3D Corsetti, a PhD candidate at MIT, and her collaborators in the Photonics and Electronics Research Group developed chip-sized devices that enable previously unimaginable applications that push the boundaries of what is possible in team, led by Professor Jelena Notaros, built the 3D printer that emits a reconfigurable beam of light into resin to create solid shapes. Small enough to sit in the palm of one's hand, the innovation is expected to enable a user to rapidly fabricate customized, low-cost objects on the go. Researchers revealed that they combined the fields of silicon photonics and photochemistry to propose the first chip-based 3D printer. They underlined that the system consists of only a single millimeter-scale photonic chip without any moving parts that emits reconfigurable visible-light holograms into a simple, stationary resin well to enable non-mechanical 3D team experimentally demonstrated a stereolithography-inspired proof-of-concept version of the chip-based 3D printer using a visible-light beam-steering integrated optical phased array and visible-light-curable resin, showing 3D printing using a chip-based system for the first time. Researchers claimed that their approach demonstrates the first steps towards a highly compact, portable, and low-cost solution for the next generation of 3D printers. Researchers believe that creating 3D objects in the palm of the hand within seconds using only a single photonic chip can transform modern manufacturing as 3D printing has revolutionized the way innovators create in nearly every aspect of modern society. Current 3D printers rely on large and complex mechanical systems to enable layer-by-layer addition of material. This limits print speed, resolution, portability, form factor, and material complexity. But the MIT team's latest innovation addresses these limitations. They also created a miniature 'tractor beam' that uses a beam of light to capture and manipulate biological particles using a chip. This could help biologists study DNA or investigate the mechanisms of disease without contaminating tissue samples. The tiny device uses a tightly focused beam of light to capture and manipulate cells. The innovation introduces a new modality for integrated optical tweezers, significantly expanding their utility and compatibility with existing applications, especially for biological experiments. Researchers expect that the chip-based 3D-printing technology introduced in this work has the potential to enable a highly-compact, portable, and low-cost solution for the next generation of 3D printers. Such a solution would offer a more accessible and rapid mechanism for generating 3D objects, impacting a wide range of application areas, including military, medical, engineering, and consumer, according to the team's approach. So far, numerous methods have been commercialized for 3D printing using extrusion, powder-bed fusion, jetting, and light-induced polymerization, among other techniques. At the consumer level, fused deposition modeling (FDM), an extrusion-based method, is the most widely used type of 3D printing.

ISS astronaut shares astonishing shot of a storm-generated sprite
ISS astronaut shares astonishing shot of a storm-generated sprite

Digital Trends

time2 hours ago

  • Digital Trends

ISS astronaut shares astonishing shot of a storm-generated sprite

'Just. Wow.' So said NASA astronaut Nichole Ayers as she caught sight of a phenomenon known as a sprite from the International Space Station (ISS) 250 miles above Earth. Ayers shared an image on her X account showing the fleeting phenomenon. You can see the sprite — essentially a large-scale electrical discharge — in the center of the picture as a bluish-white flash on the clouds, with a thin, red, tree-like burst of light shooting upward into the dark sky. Just. Wow. As we went over Mexico and the U.S. this morning, I caught this sprite. Sprites are TLEs or Transient Luminous Events, that happen above the clouds and are triggered by intense electrical activity in the thunderstorms below. We have a great view above the clouds, so… — Nichole 'Vapor' Ayers (@Astro_Ayers) July 3, 2025 'As we went over Mexico and the U.S. this morning, I caught this sprite,' the American astronaut, who arrived in orbit in March, wrote in a post on X. Recommended Videos As she explains, sprites are known as Transient Luminous Events (TLEs) that occur above clouds and are triggered by intense electrical activity in thunderstorms below. Seen from the ISS, the sprite likely lasted for less than a tenth of a second, suggesting that Ayers's image is a frame taken from a video that was monitoring the skies over Earth. 'We have a great view above the clouds, so scientists can use these types of pictures to better understand the formation, characteristics, and relationship of TLEs to thunderstorms,' Ayers wrote in her post. Unlike aurora, which are easily observed from the ground as well as space, it's much harder to observe a sprite from terra firma as it requires special conditions such as clear dark skies, distant large thunderstorms, and minimal light pollution. Visual reports of sprites were first recorded in 1886, but it wasn't until July 4, 1989 — exactly 36 years ago — that the first images were taken, by scientists at the University of Minnesota. For anyone wondering about their effect on aircraft, sprites actually take place way above commercial flight altitudes and therefore pose no direct danger to aircraft. While their electromagnetic pulses could theoretically affect an aircraft's electronics, no incidents have been reported.

Super relaxing vacation activity can lower your blood pressure and boost your immune system: study
Super relaxing vacation activity can lower your blood pressure and boost your immune system: study

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Super relaxing vacation activity can lower your blood pressure and boost your immune system: study

The single greatest thing that you can do to not only live longer but also age well is exercise. But, let's face it — people are lazy. 'We always say that exercise is the primary nonpharmacological treatment that people should be doing to promote health, but some people can't or just won't exercise,' Jessica Atencio, a doctoral student in the lab of University of Oregon professor Christopher Minson, said in a statement. Luckily for us couch potatoes, there's a much more enjoyable activity that Atencio described as 'good supplementation' to working out. If you're staying at a hotel that has a sauna, a hot tub or the increasingly trendy infrared sauna — chances are you're way more likely to be spending your time there than at the gym, especially if you're on vacation. And, according to Atencio's study in the American Journal of Physiology, that's a very good thing. All three types of heat therapy — the use of elevated temperatures to stimulate physiological responses — are said to improve blood flow, lower blood pressure, reduce inflammation and support immune function, but the research has been limited. Moreover, no one has set out to determine which of these three offers the most health benefits. 'We compared the most commonly utilized modalities of passive heating as they're used in everyday life and studied in scientific research,' Atencio said. 'No studies have compared the acute responses between the three.' To answer this question, Atencio and her team compared the effects of soaking in a hot tub versus shvitzing in a traditional sauna or relaxing in an infrared one on 20 healthy men and women. The winner? Pop the champagne for bubbles. 'We saw that hot water immersion was the most impactful in increasing core body temperature, which is the main stimulus for these subsequent responses,' Atencio said. 'Increasing body temperature causes an increase in blood flow, and just the force of blood moving across your vessels is beneficial for your vascular health.' While it might surprise you that 'hot tub' was the answer, the scientists were unfazed. 'Hot water immersion gives you the most robust changes in core temperature because you can't effectively dissipate heat as you can if you have contact with the air and you're sweating to cool the body,' Atencio explained. 'When you're submerged in water, the sweat mechanisms aren't efficient.' As with exercise, you need to hit up the hot tub on a regular basis — and not push yourself past your limits — to really reap the long-term benefits. 'There's no doubt in my mind that if people are willing to do some heat therapy, it's going to align with improved health, as long as it's done in moderation,' Minson said. 'If you repeat these stresses over time, our lab and many others have shown that they are consistent with improved health,' he added. And if you can grab a few friends to join you — or meditate while you're having a solo soak — even better. 'It can be a very peaceful, sometimes religious, sometimes cultural and sometimes social experience,' Minson said. 'And I think those aspects contribute to the health benefits and are critically important.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store