Deutsch

The Japanese team uses laser technology for ice core sampling to accurately study climate change

222
2023-09-23 10:20:57
Übersetzung anzeigen

Recently, a research team from the Astronomical Glaciology Laboratory under the RIKEN Nishina Center (RNC) of the Japanese Institute of Physics and Chemistry announced that they have developed a new laser based sampling system for studying the composition of glacier ice cores.


The above image shows the discrete holes sampled 150mm from the shallow ice core of the Fuji Ice Dome in Japan (Southeast Antarctica)
(Image source: RIKEN)


The depth resolution of the new system is 3 millimeters, three times lower than the currently available resolution, which means it can detect temperature changes that occurred in a shorter period of time in the past.

The new laser melting sampler (LMS) is expected to help reconstruct continuous annual temperature changes thousands to hundreds of thousands of years ago, which will help scientists understand past and present climate change. This study was published in the Journal of Glaciology on September 19, 2023.

Draw a climate history map
Tree rings can tell us the age of trees, and the color and width of the rings reveal information about the local climate in those years. The annual growth of glaciers can also tell us this information, but it often takes much longer. The team of scientists led by Yuko Motizuki also hopes that they can study past climate change by analyzing cylindrical ice cores extracted from glaciers.

By regularly sampling along the core, researchers can reconstruct a continuous temperature distribution. However, for samples collected from depths, this is impossible because the annual accumulation there is usually compressed to sub centimeters.

Currently, scientists typically use two standard ice core sampling methods. One method yields a depth accuracy of approximately 10 millimeters, which means that data accumulated for years less than 10 millimeters will be lost, and any significant climate change event will be missed. Another method has good depth accuracy, but it destroys some of the samples required for analyzing water content, which is the main method used by scientists to calculate past temperatures.

The new laser melting sampler overcomes these two problems: it has high depth accuracy and does not damage the key oxygen and hydrogen isotopes found in water, which are necessary for inferring past temperatures.

From: Ofweek





Ähnliche Empfehlungen
  • The scientific research team has proposed a modeless Raman fiber laser using a traditional resonant cavity structure

    The pump source, gain material, and resonant cavity are the three elements that make up a laser. Due to the selective effect of the resonant cavity on the lasing frequency, multi longitudinal mode operation is one of the characteristics of fiber lasers based on traditional resonant cavity structures, manifested as periodic beat peaks in the radio frequency (RF) spectrum and periodic fluctuations i...

    2023-08-15
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • Stable lasers developed with mixed materials focus on autonomous vehicle, etc

    Researchers printed microscale lenses directly onto optical fibers, allowing them to tightly combine the fibers and laser crystals into a single laser oscillator.Scientists have used 3D printing polymers in new micro optical technology, which can reduce the size of lasers and be used in various new applications, including the laser radar system for autonomous vehicle technology and cancer treatmen...

    2024-01-22
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • Researchers enhance the signal of perovskite nanosheets

    In the field of optoelectronics, researchers from Busan National University in South Korea and the University of Oxford in the UK have successfully improved the signal amplification ability of CsPbBr3 perovskite nanosheets through innovative patterned waveguide methods, bringing new possibilities for the future of optoelectronics. This breakthrough not only has potential applications in fields suc...

    2024-02-22
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • The scientific research team of Shenzhen University of Technology has discovered a new mechanism of attosecond pulse coherent radiation

    Recently, a team of Professor Ruan Shuangchen and Professor Zhou Cangtao from Shenzhen University of Technology proposed for the first time internationally a physical solution based on the generation of attosecond pulses and subperiodic coherent light shock radiation from a superluminal plasma wake field, and explained a new coherent radiation generation mechanism dominated by collective electron ...

    2023-10-14
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • The Role of Active Tunable Laser in GeSn Nanomechanical Oscillator in Nat Nanotechnology

    It is reported that researchers from Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne in Switzerland, Physics Laboratory of Higher Normal University in Paris, National Center for Scientific Research in France, Sorbonne University, City University of Paris, University of Leeds in the UK, and Korean Academy of Science and Technology (KAIST) have reported on the...

    2024-05-14
    Übersetzung anzeigen