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<text id=93HT0662>
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<link 93XP0145>
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<title>
1984: Debate Over A Frozen Planet
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1984 Highlights
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
December 24, 1984
SCIENCE
Debate over a Frozen Planet
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A major study supports the grim prediction of nuclear winter
</p>
<p> It is two weeks after a major nuclear war, and the searing
white flashes of 25,000 bombs have faded into a black drizzle
of radioactive fallout. Yet Armageddon is not complete: for
miles above the earth, sunlight is blotted out by plumes of
smoke from the vast conflagrations in which the major cities of
the Northern Hemisphere have been consumed. This thick veil
of soot and dust slowly circulates through various layers of the
atmosphere, blanketing entire continents, creating a world of
frigid darkness. As ground temperatures plummet by as much as
40 degrees F and the sun is obscured, crops in Iowa, Nebraska
and the Ukraine in the Soviet Union perish.
</p>
<p> This grim scene is a possible approximation of the aftermath of
nuclear war, according to a study released in Washington last
week by the National Research Council, the principal operating
agency of the nation's most august scientific body, the National
Academy of Sciences. Three years ago, Paul Crutzen, a Dutch
meteorologist who is now director of the Max Planck Institute
for Chemistry in Mainz, West Germany, suggested that a
cataclysmic nuclear war could be followed by a period of icy
gloom. Later, Atmospheric Scientist Richard Turco of R & D
Associates in Marina del Rey, Calif., Astronomer Carl Sagan of
Cornell University and a handful of other researchers elaborated
on the idea, concluding that the cold, which they called nuclear
winter, could last for months. Some scientists have disagreed
with a few of the more extreme predictions of this hypothesis,
which has been given its first official stamp of credibility by
the 193-page N.A.S. report. Declared Committee Member Turco:
"This legitimizes the problem."
</p>
<p> The study, which was commissioned in 1983 by the Department of
Defense's nuclear agency, cautioned that uncertainties remain
in many of the calculations. Even so, said George F. Carrier,
an applied mathematician at Harvard University who was chairman
of the 18-member committee, the N.A.S. findings were
"consistent" with the original studies, which predicted global
cooling and severe hardship for any survivors. The panel
recommended that high priority be given to serious research to
try to answer some of the more elusive questions that the
nuclear-winter theory has raised.
</p>
<p> The answers could eventually play a role in formulating the
nation's defense strategy. Already one U.S. Government defense
study, prepared by the Center for Aerospace Doctrine, Research
and Education in Montgomery, Ala., has based its policy analyses
on the assumption that the nuclear-winter theory is correct.
Says Theodore Postol, a strategic-arms consultant at Stanford
University: "I see this as a vehicle to raise questions about
our whole nuclear strategy."
</p>
<p> Science Adviser George Keyworth II and other members of the
Reagan Administration are citing nuclear winter as further
justification for developing the Star Wars defense system, which
might employ space-based weapons to destroy incoming missiles.
With such a system in place, argues Keyworth, neither side
would be tempted to strike first, hence the risk of a major war
and its climatic consequences would be diminished. But Postol
and many other nuclear strategists insist that Star Wars would
more likely force the Soviets also to build advanced weapons and
thus increase the threat of global holocaust.
</p>
<p> The U.S. and the Soviet Union together now have about 50,000
weapons with an explosive power of 13,000 megatons in their
nuclear arsenals. Carrier's committee studied a hypothetical war
in which about half these weapons were used, both on military
targets and on the 1,000 largest cities in the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization and Warsaw Pact countries. The blasts from
such a war, the report concluded, would immediately send 10
million to 24 million tons of dust into the stratosphere.
Another 20 million to 650 million tons of smoke coming from the
blasted cities and forests would be deposited mostly in the
troposphere. Vast clouds of dust and smoke would spread across
entire continents within days, and the Northern Hemisphere could
be blocked from 99% of the sun's light.
</p>
<p> Those grim findings could enhance the prospects for a major
federal study. In response to the N.A.S. report, the White
House may ask for at least part of a $50 million investigation
of nuclear winter that is under consideration. Global weather
patterns and the behavior of forest fires are two areas likely
to figure prominently in the study.
</p>
<p> Whether nuclear winter would actually occur after an atomic
conflagration is debatable, because the subject involves a
complex amalgam of chemistry, physics and meteorology. Indeed
the researchers who originated the concept stumbled upon it from
several different directions. Many scientists had considered
the climatic effects of nuclear war to be relatively
insignificant until Paul Crutzen, together with U.S. Chemist
John Birks, on leave from the University of Colorado, drew
attention to a previously overlooked problem: soot from fires.
In 1981, while researching a journal article on the atmospheric
consequences of nuclear war, the two assumed that at least
386,000 sq. mi. of forest could burn during a nuclear holocaust.
They estimated that the enormous columns of smoke rising into
the troposphere--where weather is generated--and possibly
into the stratosphere would be enough to block out nearly all
sunlight in many areas for weeks and maybe months.
</p>
<p> In the U.S., Sagan and Turco, together with Brian Toon, Thomas
Ackerman and James Pollack (the three are now at NASA's Ames
Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif.), arrived at their own
idea of nuclear winter in a somewhat more circuitous fashion.
They devised a series of equations, growing out of a study of
the Martian climate, to explain the cooling effects of dust in
the atmosphere. The scientists analyzed everything from storms
on Mars and volcanoes on earth to the possibility that an
asteroid collision 65 million years ago was responsible for the
demise of some of the dinosaurs. Finally, they realized that yet
another event would kick up large amounts of obscuring dust:
a nuclear war.
</p>
<p> The Turco research team, hearing of Crutzen's work just before
publication, was able to incorporate the effects of smoke and
soot into its calculations. The following year, using a
powerful Cray computer at Ames, they produced dozens of
scenarios showing the climatic impact of nuclear wars of varying
intensity and location. Christened TTAPS, after the authors'
last initials, the study assumed a nuclear bombardment of 5,000
megatons. Targets were confined to the Northern Hemisphere but
included sites ranging from missile silos to crowded cities.
The study showed that the detonations would suck up more than
25,000 tons of dust into the troposphere and lower stratosphere.
Vast firestorms would gallop through forests and urban areas
alike. Says Steven Schneider, a climatologist for the National
Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), who has
studied nuclear winter in detail: "Everything that burns--tables, chairs, human beings--is going to be turned into
something that smokes."
</p>
<p> The American scientists predicted that the clouds of smoke
would combine into fewer, more enormous columns containing as
much as 225 million tons of soot, which would collect in the
troposphere and stratosphere. Perhaps most startling of all,
the calculations showed the smoke spreading from its origin in
the Northern Hemisphere to the sky below the equator.
</p>
<p> Even a relatively small conflict of 100 megatons could trigger
a nuclear winter if the targets were cities, according to the
TTAPS study. In sum, the researchers declared, the reality of
nuclear winter raises the possibility that any aggressor will
end up exterminating himself. Says Sagan: "A doomsday machine
has been built cooperatively by the U.S. and the Soviet Union,
but nobody knew it was there."
</p>
<p> Since the appearance of the TTAPS paper, Nuclear Physicist
Edward Teller and his colleagues at California's Lawrence
Livermore Laboratory, a major weapons-research center, have
sought to downplay the degree of destruction postulated by
TTAPS. Writing in the authoritative research journal Nature
last August, Teller noted that several factors may serve to thaw
a nuclear winter: firestorms that loft smoke to a high altitude
are very rare and depend on dense concentrations of fuel and
precise weather conditions that allow all available oxygen to
be consumed. Any slight incidence of cooling, Teller told TIME,
"will be much less bad than the direct effects of a nuclear
war."
</p>
<p> Livermore calculations buttress Teller's theories. In one
computer simulation of a detonation of a single-megaton
explosion, Physicist Joyce Penner, who heads the laboratory's
study of nuclear smoke, found that a column did indeed rise six
miles into the sky, but that half the smoke dropped quickly into
the troposphere. The 50% that remained aloft, Penner estimated,
contained nearly three times the condensation needed to produce
rain. This finding suggested that even smoke in the
stratosphere, beyond the reaches of normal weather patterns,
would create its own storm and fall back to earth.
</p>
<p> Neither computers nor scientists on either side of the argument
have yet been able to answer the major questions about
conditions following a nuclear attack: How high would a column
of smoke rise from an urban obliteration? How much smoke would
fall back to earth? Would the sun cause smoke plumes to heat up
and rise higher into the stratosphere? How many megatons would
have to be detonated in order to trigger nuclear winter? To get
some answers, several federal agencies, including the
Departments of Defense and Energy, the NOAA, NASA and the
Environmental Protection Agency are about to launch a
comprehensive study. In one of the survey's likely
investigations, a plane will fly above large-scale forest fires,
and on-board equipment will gauge particle size and the
destination of the soot. High above the earth, satellites will
photograph the smoke plumes.
</p>
<p> The information gathered will then be fed into computers.
Classified data on weapon yields and height of bursts will be
included as well. Still, there is no guarantee that all the
mysteries of nuclear winter can be unraveled. Says Alan Hecht,
director of the National Climate Program Office in Washington:
"We're being asked to solve a question that is at the heart of
meteorology today." In other words, if scientists cannot
predict tomorrow's weather, how can they foresee the aftermath
of World War III?
</p>
<p> Perhaps the ultimate meaning of the possibility of nuclear
winter is the pressing need for effective arms-control
agreements. Says Crutzen: "My advice to world leaders is,
`Come to your senses.'"
</p>
<p>-- By Natalie Angier. Reported by Barrett Seaman/Washington and
Dick Thompson/San Francisco</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>