Morning Sun

NASA recruits citizen scientists to help document changing climate

- By Erin Blakemore

Is your head in the clouds?

That could be an advantage if you participat­e in a new NASA challenge.

The agency is recruiting citizen scientists to keep an eye on the clouds - and help document a changing climate.

This year’s NASA GLOBE Cloud Challenge lasts through Feb. 15. Anyone can participat­e - all it takes is a smartphone or computer and an eye toward the sky.

If you look up, you’re more likely than not to see some kind of cloud cover. Up to 70% of Earth’s land mass is covered with clouds at any given time, according to NASA’S Earth Observator­y.

Participan­ts can use the GLOBE Observer app to identify and report on those clouds and atmospheri­c visibility in their backyards. They are asked to time their observatio­ns to coincide with satellite flyovers, helping NASA scientists clear up questions about clouds the satellites have a hard time identifyin­g.

Participan­ts can report on everything from surface conditions to the sky’s cover and visibility, and the app helps walk them through figuring out which types of clouds are above them.

NASA wants to collect at least 20,000 cloud observatio­ns during the challenge.

Another way to participat­e is through NASA GLOBE Cloud Gaze. Participan­ts use the Zooniverse platform to look at existing sky photograph­s and identify cloud types and things such as smoke plumes.

All that ground-up data has a purpose: to give scientists a more robust understand­ing of clouds and their effect on climate.

Clouds can warm the atmosphere by trapping heat from the Earth’s surface. But they can also cool it by shielding the planet from the sun’s intense rays. The height and type of the clouds matters when it comes to Earth’s energy balance; high-level clouds reflect some solar radiation back into the space, but trap some heat in the atmosphere and bounce it back down toward Earth. Low-hanging clouds tend to cool Earth’s surface.

“Each cloud type affects Earth’s energy balance differentl­y. That’s what we’re trying to understand,” said Marilé Colón Robles, atmospheri­c scientist and lead for the GLOBE Clouds Team at NASA’S Langley Research Center, in a news release.

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