Warming, Longevity and Slingshots

Warming, Longevity and Slingshots

My last two columns have dealt with ammonia and with a

memory of a remark by one of my chemistry professors at

Dickinson College, located in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. My 55th

reunion at Dickinson prompted the remembrance. Going to a

55th college reunion is a joyous, yet sobering event. The

weather was ideal, Dickinson”s campus is still beautiful and the

new president, Bill Durden, is a remarkable individual.

Coincidentally, he”s a fraternity brother of our Lamb guy, Harry

Trumbore, who overlapped Durden at Dickinson back in the

early 1970s. The charismatic Durden combines both his

enthusiasm and passion for his alma mater with an exceptional

ability to convey those feelings to an audience. After hearing

one of his speeches, I felt that I had been in the presence of that

rare individual, a true leader. Fortunately, I resisted the urge

following his speech to give my life”s savings to the college! The

most enjoyable part of the reunion was, of course, getting

together with the dozen classmates from the class of 1946.

The sobering aspect of attending a 55th reunion is the fact that

too many of my classmates and some of their spouses are no

longer with us. The other side of that coin was the sizable

number of lively individuals sitting at the next table celebrating

their 65th reunion! There”s still hope!

Prior to starting this column, and not knowing what I would

write about, I”d finished eating a bowl of Breyer”s cherry vanilla

ice cream. This may sound totally irrelevant but I”ve mentioned

a couple times that Breyer”s ice cream literally saved my life –

making it possible for me to go to Dickinson College and now to

celebrate a 55th reunion. The ammonia connection is that the

Rakestraw”s ammonia plant blew up at the time I was picking up

the alternate choice, Breyer”s ice cream. My wife and I visited

the Rakestraw”s ice cream facility while on a break from my

reunion. I enjoyed a big dish of black walnut ice cream while

sitting outside in the parking lot on the old stone wall with a local

parent and her two boys. The ice cream was very good and

childhood memories were kindled.

But, back to the issue of longevity – that was really what we were

talking about, wasn”t it? After finishing the ice cream, we drove

down the alley and saw my family”s first house in Mechanicsburg

(we lived in four rented houses there). It is a duplex side-by-side

house. The other side at the time was occupied by the Spooners

(name changed to protect their privacy). As we approached the

house, I saw an elderly lady up the street talking to a young

mother and her children. I told my wife, “That lady looks like a

Spooner.” I stopped the car and inquired as to the whereabouts,

if any, of any remaining Spooners. “I”m Ruth Spooner!” said the

lady. Well, Ruth was the daughter living with her parents when I

lived next door. She had grown to resemble her mother,

accounting for my recognition. I hadn”t seen her for almost 60

years! At 87, she still keeps up her flower garden, lives alone

and her 92-year-old brother comes over to mow the lawn! Their

substantial sized lot actually looks better than it did when I was a

kid. Now there”s more hope that I might make my 65th reunion!

But this is talking longevity on a local scale. As we”ve discussed

in past columns, some scientists worry about longevity on a

much grander scale. We”ve considered what would happen if

the human race somehow managed to survive the eons of time

until the universe had expanded and the stars had run out of fuel

and things got really, really cold. Actually, today”s problem is

just the opposite and we”ve seen this past week demonstrations

during Bush”s European visit. One object of the demonstrations

is our policy on global warming, which the scientific community

is generally convinced is caused by or exaggerated by human

activities. It”s certainly not my field of expertise, but the number

of papers in scientific journals supporting this conclusion is quite

impressive. An increase in the average temperature of the earth

of just a few degrees could have serious consequences for life as

we know it.

But there”s another warming trend, solar warming, that occupies

the thoughts of more long-range thinkers. This solar warming is,

as the name implies, the fact that our sun itself is getting hotter.

To the casual observer, the sun looks pretty simple – a hot yellow

ball. Of course, we”ve all seen pictures of sunspots and the sun”s

corona, observed during eclipses, but it”s much more complex.

Some awesome pictures of the sun at various wavelengths of

light can be seen in an article in the June 2001 issue of Scientific

American. These pictures show a sun just boiling with activity

and huge swirling “storms”. The article, by Bhola Dwivedi and

Kenneth Phillips, is titled “The Paradox of the Sun”s Hot Corona”

and deals with a most unusual characteristic of our heavenly

benefactor. The sun”s energy that sustains us all originates in the

core of the sun through the same process of nuclear fusion used

in the hydrogen bomb. The temperature in the core is in the

neighborhood of 15 million degrees Kelvin. Don”t bother trying

to convert to Fahrenheit – it”s still ridiculously hot! As all that

energy wends its way to near the surface things cool down

remarkably to only about 6,000 kelvins. But here”s where things

get interesting. Closer to the surface, the temperature rises to

about 10,000 kelvins and, even more startling, out in space in the

corona it can get back to a million or so degrees! This article

describes how scientists now believe that this increase in

temperature is related to the presence of magnetic fields.

The explanation of this interesting phenomenon is pretty

complex and frankly I found it difficult to understand. Also,

since the astrophysicists don”t seem to agree unanimously about

the explanation, I have an excuse not to burden you or myself

with the details. So I turned to another very brief article by Mark

Garlick, a former astronomer, in the same issue of Scientific

American. This article is titled “Save the Earth”, which sounded

like it might be of much more immediate concern. And it is – if

your time frame is a billion years or so. Here”s where the solar

warming comes in. According to Garlick, today”s sun is roughly

30 to 40 percent warmer than it was when it entered its current

state of relative stability some billions of years ago. Right now,

this degree of warmth seems pretty nicely suited for us humans

and other forms of life on our own planet. However, over the

next billion years, the sun will gradually get hotter and brighter

until it”s about 10 percent brighter than it is today. Boy, we”ll

really need that air conditioning!

One solution is to move to another planet, Mars being the closest

option. We discussed a few weeks ago some of the problems

getting to Mars – it”s a daunting challenge. But Garlick reports

that, at the University of California at Santa Cruz, a fellow by the

name of Donald Korycansky and his colleagues have found a

simpler answer. Let”s compensate for the increasing temperature

by moving out farther away from the sun! In fact, over a period

of 6 billion years, move it out beyond Mars” current orbit!

The way that they propose to accomplish this feat is to use the

simple “slingshot” technique that we”ve used for managing the

journeys of some of our space probes. By controlling the orbit of

the probe just right we”ve been able to send the spacecraft close

enough to a planet for the planet”s gravity to attract the spacecraft

and speed it up in an orbit that slings it back out into space at an

faster speed. In fact, if memory serves me correctly, within the

past year or so some skeptics were concerned that one such space

probe was going to crash into us as it slingshotted around the

earth. Of course, nothing happened and the probe is out there

somewhere today headed for its destination. If you”re also a

skeptic, you might say, that this slingshot technique sounds like

we”re getting extra energy for nothing. Actually, what the

spacecraft picks up in energy results in an equal and opposite

change in the energy and momentum of the planet. But the

spacecraft is such a tiny object compared to a planet like earth

that we never even noticed the jolt.

Suppose though that instead of a wimpy spacecraft, we zip an

asteroid by the earth. In fact, let”s send a pretty sizeable asteroid,

about 60 miles in diameter and weighing zillions of tons, slinging

itself by the earth. If the position and orbit of this monster were

just right, the earth would move out to a new orbit farther from

the sun. Korycansky estimates that a move like this every 6,000

years would keep us cool enough to live a comfortable life.

According to Garlick, the approach employs technology that is

only decades away from being feasible. He doesn”t point out that

we have recently landed a spacecraft on an asteroid, Eros. Now

we just have to figure out how to steer it!

My own feeling is that it”s more urgent that we mount a major

effort to detect and deflect incoming space objects that actually

threaten to hit us! That seems to me more urgent than an

antimissile defense. An incoming asteroid or other space object

could make any worries about longevity moot – as the dinosaurs

found out!

On the other hand, if global warming is going to affect our lives

in this century, should we consider moving ourselves to a cooler

orbit in this century? I”m not sure I want to be around for that

experiment. Suppose NASA or its contractors foul up their units

as they did in one of the recent Mars probes. We may find the

asteroid on the wrong side of the earth and bumping us closer to

the sun! Or even crashing into us! Another thing, the article

didn”t mention what the moon is going to be doing as the earth

moves out. We sure wouldn”t want to lose it! And if we do

make it out near Mars, are we risking bumping into it?

I think I”ll just concentrate on making my 60th reunion!

Allen F. Bortrum