(Press-News.org) The sun may rise every morning, but the amount of sunlight reaching the Earth’s surface can substantially vary over decades, according to a perspectives article led by an international research team. The article, published on March 15 in Advances in Atmospheric Science, suggests that stages of “dimming” and “brightening” correspond with increased air pollution and implementation of clean energy solutions, respectively.
“The amount of sunlight — which is solar radiative energy — we receive at the Earth’s surface is not necessarily stable over the years but can undergo substantial decadal variations, as documented in the long-term historical solar radiation measurements we examined,” said corresponding author Martin Wild, professor with the Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Science, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zürich). “These indicate declining solar radiative energy in large parts of the world from the 1950s to the 1980s — known as global dimming — and a partial recovery thereafter, known as brightening, at many observation sites.”
After reviewing the existing scientific literature on dimming and brightening research, which dates to the early 20th century and spans the globe, the researchers focused on regional-scale trends of solar radiative energy in China.
“China provides a conducive environment for understanding aerosol radiative effects — or how air pollutants impact the amount of solar radiative energy reaching Earth’s surface,” Wild said. “China has well-organized, long-term and spatially uniform surface observations, making the country one of the most intensively studied world regions in terms of dimming and brightening, as reflected in an impressive number of related publications.”
Across the previous studies, the researchers found that the decadal variations in solar energy reaching the Earth’s surface were particularly pronounced in China. Solar energy substantially declined from the 1960s to the 1990s, and the trend appeared to begin to reverse in the 2000s with a slight recovery in more recent years.
“The causes for these dramatic changes are thought to be primarily due to increasing air pollution in the ‘dimming’ phase, and due to the successful implementation of air pollution mitigation measures in the ‘brightening’ phase,” Wild said.
Air pollution from the increasingly used fossil fuels and exacerbated carbon emissions over the years can literally intercept incoming solar radiation and prevent it from reaching the planet’s surface, Wild explained. The more pollution in the atmosphere, the less sunlight reaches Earth’s surface. Now that China has started to reverse this trend by reducing air pollution, more sunlight is researching the surface, which could have compounding benefits.
“If China fully recovers from the dimming phase and reverts to the clean atmosphere levels of the 1960s, the country could make substantial gains in solar power production,” Wild said. “These decadal changes of dimming and brightening in the available solar energy are not only crucial for various aspects of climate and environmental change, but are also of significant importance for resource assessments in the rapidly growing sector of solar power production. The availability of solar energy at the Earth’s surface is such a critical factor for so many relevant ecological and societal aspects, as well as for the existence of life in the first place, that it deserves a sustained investment into its investigations as well as its long-term monitoring both from the surface and space.”
There are challenges, however, the researchers said, in fully understanding the dimming and brightening phenomenon’s magnitude, causes, predictability and implications in a wide range of applications. The study authors recommend that researchers in the field work together and focus on optimally combining the diverse information contained in their different but complementary data sources, remedying remaining inconsistencies, to allow for the best possible understanding of variations in sunlight reaching Earth’s surface.
Other collaborators include Yawen Wang, Ocean University of China, Qingdao; Kaicun Wang, Peking University; and Su Yang, China Meteorological Administration.
This paper was solicited by Advances in Atmospheric Sciences after the researchers presented their work at the International Radiation Symposium in China in June of 2024. The Swiss National Science Foundation and the Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology MeteoSwiss, within the framework of Global Climate Observing System Switzerland, supported this work.
END
Amount of sunlight reaching Earth’s surface varies over decades, researchers report
2025-04-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Heart valve abnormality is associated with malignant arrhythmias
2025-04-15
People with a certain heart valve abnormality are at increased risk of severe heart rhythm disorders, even after successful valve surgery. This is according to a new study from Karolinska Institutet and Karolinska University Hospital in Sweden published in the European Heart Journal. The condition is more common in women and younger patients with valve disorder and can, in the worst case, lead to sudden cardiac arrest.
Mitral annular disjunction, MAD, is a heart abnormality in which the mitral valve attachment ‘slides’. In recent years, the condition has ...
Explainable AI for ship navigation raises trust, decreases human error
2025-04-15
The Titanic sunk 113 years ago on April 14-15, after hitting an iceberg, with human error likely causing the ship to stray into those dangerous waters. Today, autonomous systems built on artificial intelligence can help ships avoid such accidents, but could such a system explain to the captain why it was maneuvering a certain way?
That’s the idea behind explainable AI, which should help human actors trust autonomous systems more. Researchers from Osaka Metropolitan University’s Graduate School of Engineering have developed an explainable AI model for ships that quantifies the collision risk for all vessels ...
Study reveals erasing inequality could prevent hundreds of adverse births annually in major UK city
2025-04-15
In Birmingham, 43% of the population live in the most deprived 10% of neighborhoods in England. It is well known that deprivation can lead to adverse pregnancy outcomes, including low birth weight, premature birth, stillbirths, and neonatal mortality.
Now, researchers there examined the association between demographic, socioeconomic, and lifestyle factors and the risk of adverse birth outcomes in Birmingham and neighboring Solihull, an area much less affected by deprivation.
“Within the study population, there were significant differences in the odds of adverse birth outcomes and the risk factors of adverse birth outcomes by ethnicity ...
No “uncanny valley” effect in science-telling AI avatars
2025-04-15
If you’re among the 1.5 billion people worldwide using TikTok, you may have come across exceptional “testimonials” like Nikola Tesla or Marie Curie delivering short science-related messages that have garnered millions of views. This is just one of many examples where AI-generated avatars are used to communicate science — a strategy that might also have its drawbacks.
The generation of images and animations through artificial intelligence is a rapidly growing field, constantly improving in quality. Yet many avatars, though realistic, still present minor flaws — glitches, delays, inconsistent ...
New UNCG research shows southern shrews shrink in winter
2025-04-15
Newly published research from UNC Greensboro biology professor Dr. Bryan McLean and colleagues shows that the masked shrew, a small, mole-like mammal found in the Appalachian Mountains, shrinks its body and braincase to conserve energy during winter months. The study, published in the May 2025 issue of The American Naturalist, found that the masked shrew (Sorex cinereus) reduces its body mass by 13 percent in the colder months; the creature then grows larger in spring when conditions improve. In addition to a shrinking body, the team also found seasonal changes in the height of the creature’s ...
Children exposed to brain-harming chemicals while sleeping
2025-04-15
Babies and young children may breathe and absorb plasticizers called phthalates, flame retardants, and other harmful chemicals from their mattresses while they sleep, according to a pair of peer-reviewed studies published today from the University of Toronto in Environmental Science & Technology and Environmental Science & Technology Letters. These chemicals are linked to neurological and reproductive problems, asthma, hormone disruption, and cancer.
"Sleep is vital for brain development, ...
Emotions and levels of threat affect communities’ resilience during extreme events
2025-04-15
Hoboken, N.J., April 14, 2025 — Tightly connected communities tend to be more resilient when facing extreme events such as earthquakes, hurricanes, floods or wildfires, says Jose Ramirez-Marquez, who develops metrics to analyze, quantify and ultimately improve performance of urban systems.
Ramirez-Marquez, associate professor and division director of Enterprise Science and Engineering at Stevens, who grew up in the earthquake-prone Mexico City knows this first-hand. “Whenever there's an earthquake, a city-wide alarm goes off and everybody leaves wherever they are and stays in the middle of the street — that’s a prevention phase,” he says. ...
New CONSORT reporting guidelines published today in five medical journals
2025-04-14
Under embargo until 23:30 (UK), Monday April 14, 2025
An updated set of guidelines to improve transparency and clarity in the reporting of randomised controlled trials have been published today. The CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) 2025 statement provides a minimum set of essential items that should be included when reporting the results of randomised trials.
First published in 1996, the CONSORT guidelines saw additional updates in 2001 and 2010. Becoming the gold standard for reporting randomised trials, ...
Experts stress importance of vaccination amidst measles outbreaks
2025-04-14
Pediatric infectious diseases experts stress the importance of vaccination against measles, one of the most contagious viruses, which is once more spreading in the United States. In the article published in Pediatrics, they update pediatricians on this vaccine-preventable disease, which was previously declared non-endemic in the U.S.
“The most effective way to prevent measles is vaccination,” said lead author Caitlin Naureckas Li, MD MHQS, infectious diseases specialist at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago and Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Northwestern University ...
Enabling stroke victims to 'speak': $19 million toward brain implants to be built at U-M
2025-04-14
Images
A new collaboration between the University of Michigan and Stanford University aims to give stroke patients the ability to "speak" by detecting and interpreting brain signals, using the world's smallest computers linked up to the world's most biocompatible sensors.
The Marcus Foundation announced today a $29.7 million grant, led by Stanford, that would benefit victims of aphasic stroke, who are often left struggling to communicate. U-M will receive $19 million of the total grant.
According to the American Heart Association, stroke is the leading cause of disability in the ...