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How To Calculate The Volume Of A Right Cone

Cones are used every day for a variety of purposes. Perhaps the most useful application of the cone shape is as a funnel. For finding the volume, a cone is best viewed as a stack of circles, each one smaller than the one before, until the last is no more than a point on the line that passes through the center of each circle throughout the length of ...

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VolumeOfARight Cone
Medicine

Why Is Blood Pressure Two Numbers?

Blood pressure might better be called heart pressure, for the heart's pumping action creates it. To measure blood pressure, health workers determine how hard the blood is pushing at two different ... Continue reading

WhyIsBloodPressureTwoNumbers
Chemistry

Ozone: Good Up High, Bad Nearby

Ozone is a gas that forms in the atmosphere when 3 atoms of oxygen are combined (03). It is not emitted directly into the air, but at ground level is created by a chemical reaction between oxides of ... Continue reading

Ozone
Astronomy

Venus Is Hot Stuff

At first glance, if Earth had a twin, it would be Venus. The two planets are similar in size, mass, composition, and distance from the Sun. But there the similarities end. Venus has no ocean. Venus is ... Continue reading

VenusIsHotStuff
Physics

When Do We Encounter Ionizing Radiation In Our Daily Lives?

Everyone who lives on this planet is constantly exposed to naturally occurring ionizing radiation (background radiation). This has been true since the dawn of time. The average effective dose ... Continue reading

IonizingRadiation

Will Runaway Water Warm the World?

WillRunawayWaterWarmtheWorldWater in the upper atmosphere will make the Earth heat up, but not as much as many scientists have believed, says a new study published by NASA scientists. Using satellite data, researchers Ken Minschwaner and Andrew Dessler at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center have shown that the upper atmosphere does not get as humid as most scientists assumed, and that means that temperatures may not increase as much as some predict, though the problem of climate change is still significant. Across the globe, temperatures are slowly creeping up. Scientists estimate that the average global surface temperature could climb anywhere from 1.4 to 5.8 degrees Celsius by the year 2100. Part of the reason the predicted temperature range is so great is that scientists don't entirely understand whether the atmosphere will become more humid as it warms, and humidity is one of the primary factors that will influence warming.

When the Earth heats up, more water evaporates from the oceans. Hotter air can hold more water, so with higher temperatures, the humidity can be greater. Scientists have assumed that as the Earth heats up, enough extra water will enter the atmosphere to keep the relative humidity -- the amount of water in the air compared to what it can hold -- constant. Since water vapor traps heat next to the surface of the Earth, more water in the atmosphere leads to more heating, which leads to more water vapor... The loop is called water vapor feedback. When scientists assume that enough water vapor enters the atmosphere to keep the relative humidity constant, models show a temperature increase that is twice that caused by carbon dioxide alone.

Minschwaner, also a professor of physics at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, and Dessler, also a researcher with the University of Maryland's Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center, formulated a simple, one-dimensional model to describe how the humidity of the atmosphere will change as the Earth heats up in response to carbon dioxide emissions from burning of fossil fuels. Surprisingly, their model predicted smaller increases in humidity in the upper atmosphere than large global climate models do, and data collected by the Microwave Limb Sounder and the Halogen Occultation Experiment on NASA's Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) support their model. Their findings imply that the Earth will warm significantly, but probably not as much as most global climate models predict. Minschwaner and Dessler's results could help refine the scientific understanding of water vapor feedback and the models that predict climate change.