Automatically translated from Basque, translation may contain errors. More information here. Elhuyarren itzultzaile automatikoaren logoa

Light pollution: Within 20 years, we'll see half of the stars we see today because of LEDs.

  • From the megalopolis where millions of people accumulate to the farthest areas of the world, light pollution grows much faster than expected. This is demonstrated by a study published in Science magazine on January 19. To quantify the increase in light pollution, a team of scientists, led by astrophysicist Christopher Kyba of the German Research Centre in Earth Sciences, has used the data collected by the Globe At Night program, made up of volunteer scientists. The Globe At Night platform brings together 51,351 night observations on the skies around the world, especially in North America and Europe, to a lesser extent in Asia.

20 February 2023 - 00:03
Last updated: 15:28

Artificial night lights, increasingly used by humans all over the planet and, above all, in the urbanized areas, not only illuminate the ground and the environment of our base, but send their brightness to the sky. As a result, animals lose on the one hand the darkness of the night and on the other, they see fewer and fewer stars in the sky. But this loss is greater than previously thought and is growing faster, as evidenced by data collected by the Globe At Night platform.

Scientists have so far relied on information sent by artificial satellites from Earth orbit to measure the development of light pollution. The truth is that satellites can measure the light emitted upwards, but they're not able to measure all the wavelengths generated by LED lighting, not even the light emitted horizontally. The change has come when Kyba and his teams have incorporated in their new study the information gathered in their nocturnal observations by science enthusiasts around the world. They have thus come to the conclusion that between 2011 and 2022 the average night sky has become 9.6% brighter worldwide, that is, every eight years the brightness of the sky visible to the human eye doubles.

Science has highlighted that “the advances made in lighting technology during these years have hindered the measurement of light pollution caused by changes in emission spectra. On this occasion, 51,351 people use stargazing at the spectacularity of stars to investigate the glitter change in the skies of the planet between 2011 and 2022. Thus, a decrease in the number of stars visible to the naked eye has been observed by increasing the night brightness from 7% to 10% in the human vision band. This increase is much faster than we could have deduced from satellite observations so far.”

According to previous studies, in recent years light pollution has grown by about 2% each year. These investigations used satellite data around the Earth, that is, from the space where the light was measured that came out of the atmosphere. In the new investigation they have added thousands of observers who have the information obtained upwards. These observations measure the brightness of the sky, increasing the brightness of artificial lighting. Satellites vertically measure light emitted from Earth into space and are blind to the blue component of light. On the contrary, the observation of the brightness of the sky by the voluntary population from the ground also includes the light transmitted horizontally and indirectly, such as the leakage of building facades, electronic screens and windows. And in addition, the human eye perceives light in a wider spectrum than satellites. These factors produce the brightness of the sky and are valid predictors of biological impact. “Like the human eye,” Kyba said, “is sensitive at night at shorter wavelengths, LED lights greatly influence our perception of the brightness of the sky.”

In the last 150 years, man has greatly transformed nature. It is becoming increasingly evident that the loss of night darkness on much of the planet is one of the most profound changes. As stated by the authors of the study of Science, the nature of the night sky today is very different from the times when life and civilization developed, and it is clear that light pollution continues to increase steadily. Christopher Kyba, a researcher at the Geocience Research Centre in Germany and the lead author of the study, states that "At that rate, a person born in a place where 250 stars could be seen will only see 100 by the time he turns 18."

In order to see the stars of the night, the citizen is obliged to enter places that are ever further away.

 


You are interested in the channel: Kutsadura
Arkaitzerreka: GuraSOS denounces that it has been contaminated and GHK says it is a natural phenomenon
Last Friday a citizen detected that the water was not clean, but it is not known since when it is. As ARGIA has been aware, the members of the URA agency have approached Arkaitzerreka to participate in the initiative. Discharges and pollution of the incinerator have long been... [+]

ChatGPT also knows that data centers will steal millions of liters of water from us.
By pooling artificial intelligence, tech multinationals have multiplied their plans to build large cloud data centers. The mega-fabric ecological footprint with computer equipment is huge: in addition to electricity, they need millions of liters of water to cool their systems... [+]

Ekologistak Martxan denounces the risk of works for the bridge between Barakaldo and Erandio
From the environmental organization they see with concern the announcement of 87,000 cubic meters of river bottom dredging for the construction of the bridge between Barakaldo and Erandio. It has denounced the waste of public money, the irresponsibility and lack of planning by... [+]

"Many school areas in Bilbao are areas full of pollution and noise"
The too small patio of cement, on the one hand, the school environment plagued with roads and cars, on the other, the vast majority of the associations of fathers and mothers of the city, along with their forces, have come to the City Hall to denounce and ask for the... [+]

If the incinerator has shown the first poisons... What to do?
The ToxiWatch Foundation has presented the results of the five-year monitoring of emissions from the incinerator at Gipuzkoa. Worrying results because we are talking about pollutants that can cause serious health damage to living beings and, in particular, to humans. The... [+]

2024-05-31 | Elhuyar
Microplastics are also found in the testicles
In the testicles of people and dogs, microplastics have been found at significant levels. And researchers warn that this can affect fertility decline. The study was published in the journal Toxicological Sciences.

Large quantities of dioxins have been measured in populations close to the Zubieta incinerator
Toxicowatch has taken samples for five years in eggs from chickens, moss, trees, sediments and breast milk in the incinerator environment. Dioxin levels have increased considerably since 2019, including heavy metals, PFAS and other highly polluting substances. On Thursday, the... [+]

2024-05-17 | ARGIA
March to the Zubieta Incinerator on Saturday from Lasarte
On Saturday, 18 May, the Anti-Incinerator Movement (EAM) organised a march against the Zubieta Incinerator. Departure from Lasarte-Oria, Okendo Square at 11:00 hours.

2024-05-16 | Uriola.eus
The Basque Government agrees to the closure of the company Profersa de Zorroza in Bilbao
The decision was taken following the inspection carried out on Monday in connection with the accidents that have occurred in recent weeks.

Aixa Barbarin López, submarine archaeologist
"Ports are landfills"
Aixa Barbarin López is an underwater archaeologist and, as he has acknowledged, wanted to be an archaeologist from a very young age. Therefore, when the time came to go to university, he chose to study history at the UPV and immersed himself in archaeology. But it didn't occur... [+]

2024-05-08 | ARGIA
They discover an "alarming increase" in pollution in the areas of the Zubieta incinerator and call on the go
The ToxiWatch foundation has been collecting samples in the incinerator area of Zubieta for five years in search of heavy metals, dioxins, PCBs and PFAS. All of them appear in the samples and furthermore the Anti-Incineration Movement announced at a press conference on Tuesday... [+]

The level of contamination in the school environment has been measured and the results are very worrying
In the Basque Country, 28 areas of educational establishments have been analysed: 28 have higher pollution than the World Health Organization considers safe and 75% do not reach the level of pollution that the European Commission itself considers acceptable. On 10 May, students... [+]

Microplastics in the archaeological heritage

York, England, 2nd century. Various structures and houses were built in the Roman city of Eboracum. Among others, they built a stone building in the present Wellington Row and placed an arch in the wall that crossed the Queen’s Hotel. Both deposits were excavated in the second... [+]


2024-04-12 | ARGIA
The ten companies that emit more carbon dioxide in the Spanish state are Repsol, Iberdrola and ArcelorMittal
In 2023, carbon dioxide emissions in the Spanish State decreased by 5.3%. Of the ten largest companies, only one has increased, the airline Iberia, with an increase of 10.7%. The first in the pollutant list is Repsol.

Microplastics are also found in the human placenta.
A team of American researchers has analyzed 62 human cores or placenta using gas chromatography and mass spectrometry, demonstrating that all samples had microplastics. The study was published by the journal Toxicological Sciences. According to him, the concentration of... [+]

Eguneraketa berriak daude