The National - News

NASA SCIENTISTS TO TRACK DUST STORMS FROM SPACE

▶ ISS project may help Middle East predict them and gauge effect on planet

- TAYLOR HEYMAN

Scientists are hoping to discover how dust storms could cool or heat the planet, with an ambitious mission to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

The Earth Surface Mineral Dust Source Investigat­ion project will send a specially built scientific instrument to the ISS on a SpaceX rocket on June 7.

Engineers will use a robotic arm to attach a new imaging spectromet­er, which can accurately measure wavelength­s of light, to the space station.

It will take more than a billion measuremen­ts of the Earth to help scientists understand global movements of dust.

These will help to make up for a lack of data on the world’s arid regions, and may help researcher­s to predict when dust storms will arrive, protecting people from their impact.

Scientists also hope they will finally find out whether dust in the atmosphere helps to heat or cool the planet.

About two billion tonnes of dust is blown into the atmosphere every year, but not all of that is the same.

Dr Robert Green, principal scientist on the project at Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, said finding out what makes up a dust storm was a priority for the mission.

“Our job is to understand the compositio­n of the materials that ended up in the dust storms first, which is currently poorly known,” Dr Green told The National. “And that can impact human health.”

Dust particles’ colour and content can play a role in the effect they have on the planet.

“When it blows into the atmosphere, if it’s light-coloured dust, it reflects sunlight back into space and cools our planet,” Dr Green said.

“If it’s dark-coloured dust, maybe with iron oxide, it heats our planet.”

He said the same phenomenon could also affect regional climates. A pioneering project in Saudi Arabia has already used satellite images to show this phenomenon in action, proving dust from the Empty Quarter helps to keep the Red Sea cool, preventing droughts.

Dust also plays a role in the functionin­g of many ecosystems. Nasa research published in 2015 showed dust from the Sahara, swept up and carried far and wide by the wind, was providing nutrients to the Amazon rainforest and feeding organisms in the Atlantic Ocean.

Dust even provides some of the materials needed for coral reefs to grow.

Dust can also have a harmful effect. In Iraq, more than 5,000 people were admitted to hospital and one killed this month after a huge dust storm. Another storm halted flights in Kuwait this week.

A 2020 World Bank study found extreme dust storms cost the Middle East and North Africa $150 billion a year.

The findings of the project will be shared openly, allowing scientists and government­s in the region and beyond to analyse and model dust storms in the hope of easing them or giving earlier warnings.

“Certainly the Middle East and North Africa, in particular, are big dust source regions, and somewhat poorly sampled in terms of the compositio­n, what types of minerals are there,” said Dr Green.

“So we will produce detailed mineral maps of the surface dust compositio­n in the Middle East and this could be used locally to make some assumption­s about what type of dust is in the storms and how that might interact with people.”

Although lots of the particles in the atmosphere can be traced back to deserts, human activity also generates dust.

The UN has called for global action against man-made dust emissions, known as anthropoge­nic dust.

Unlike the dust generated by the Empty Quarter or Sahara, anthropoge­nic dust can be caused by too much building work, not enough vegetation, land degradatio­n and reducing water sources with dams.

Although dust storms are likely to be a fact of life for the region, researcher­s say they are excited to get their hands on the data and that being prepared is the best defence.

Dr Sara Basart, lead scientist at the Barcelona Dust Centre, said the project’s data would transform her area of study.

“We cannot stop sand and desert storms,” she said. “In the Middle East, you have your big desert in the middle of Saudi Arabia, and this is a natural desert. You cannot plant more trees or do anything to really prevent the dust emissions.”

But modelling them is important. “The only tool that we have for mitigating the risk is prevention, said Dr Basart. “And forecasts are tools that are really going in that direction. If you know in advance that there will be this huge sand and dust storm, you can do things before the dust storm arrives.”

 ?? Nasa Earth Observator­y /AFP ?? A giant dust storm covers parts of Iraq, Kuwait and Iran in a Nasa photograph taken from orbit on Monday
Nasa Earth Observator­y /AFP A giant dust storm covers parts of Iraq, Kuwait and Iran in a Nasa photograph taken from orbit on Monday

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