• @[email protected]
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    11 days ago

    NOAA is doing this science and is alarmed, this isn’t just some shower thought

    Using an extraordinarily sensitive instrument custom-built at NOAA in Boulder, Colorado, and mounted in the nose of a NASA WB-57 research aircraft**, scientists found aluminum and exotic metals embedded in about 10 percent of sulfuric acid particles, which comprise the large majority of particles in the stratosphere. They were also able to match the ratio of rare elements they measured to special alloys used in rockets and satellites, confirming their source as metal vaporized from spacecraft reentering Earth’s atmosphere.

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    • @CameronDev
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      711 days ago

      There will be a lot of work to understand the implications of these novel metals in the stratosphere,” Murphy said

      I don’t see anything in that article about them being “alarmed”.

      So far all the scientists appear to be saying “heads up, we need to investigate this further”, not “stop launching, this is bad”. We should listen to the scientists.

      • @[email protected]
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        1011 days ago

        if you read the linked pnas article at https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2313374120 while remaining scientifically dispassionate I very much get the impression they are trying to warn us about the trajectory we are currently on.

        You are correct though, the article doesn’t say that they are alarmed I have inferred that from following the subject in general.