The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Drone tech offers new ways to manage climate change

- By Jennifer Savran Kelly

PORTLAND, Oregon: An innovation providing key clues to how humans might manage forests and cities to cool the planet is taking flight.

Cornell researcher­s are using drone technology to more accurately measure surface reflectivi­ty on the landscape, a technologi­cal advance that could offer a new way to manage climate change.

“When making prediction­s about climate change, it’s critical that scientists understand how much energy the earth is absorbing and retaining,” said Charlotte Levy, a doctoral candidate who presented a talk on her research this week at the annual Ecological Society of America meeting, in Portland, Oregon.

When a surface reflects solar energy rather than absorbing it as heat, the result is major cooling, locally and globally. The scientific term for the measuremen­t of surface reflectivi­ty is albedo. “Albedo is important to understand because it’s one of the main controls for the Earth’s overall energy budget,” said Levy, whose research project is directed by Timothy Fahey, professor of natural resources. She is advised by Christine Goodale, professor of ecology and evolutiona­ry biology.

Using drones, also known as unmanned aerial vehicles, Levy and others have developed a novel method of measuring albedo with more flexibilit­y and accuracy than was possible before.

Climate scientists have long been able to get albedo measuremen­ts throughout the United States via satellites and sensors placed on research towers. However, there are relatively few of these, and they cannot be moved to compare the albedo of nearby locations. “The drones allow for measuremen­ts to be taken wherever they are needed,” Levy said. “We can send one to hover above a forest and then have it fly across the road where the same forest was thinned five years earlier, and we can measure precisely what the difference is.”

Past attempts by scientists to use drones to study albedo have failed because the sensors required to make the measuremen­ts are heavy and throw off the drones’ balance.

Levy and her team halved both the weight and the engineerin­g challenge by placing only the downward-facing sensor on the drone. The upward-facing sensor is placed in a nearby field.

Currently, they are validating the method, demonstrat­ing that the drones’ measuremen­ts compare favourably to those taken by satellite and tower.

“This is a big finding from a climate change perspectiv­e because we see a lot of potential applicatio­ns,” said Levy. — Cornell News

 ??  ?? Charlotte Levy examines a drone that will examine albedo before flight. — Cornell University photo
Charlotte Levy examines a drone that will examine albedo before flight. — Cornell University photo

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