Close Menu
Ztoog
    What's Hot
    Gadgets

    iPhone SE 4 Allegedly Pushed To 2025 Due To Apple’s Custom 5G Modems

    The Future

    What Are The Causes And Solutions Of Apple Carplay Not Working?

    Mobile

    Samsung Galaxy A25 specs leak

    Important Pages:
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Ztoog
    • Home
    • The Future

      What is Project Management? 5 Best Tools that You Can Try

      Operational excellence strategy and continuous improvement

      Hannah Fry: AI isn’t as powerful as we think

      FanDuel goes all in on responsible gaming push with new Play with a Plan campaign

      Gettyimages.com Is the Best Website on the Internet Right Now

    • Technology

      Iran war: How could it end?

      Democratic senators question CFTC staffing cuts in Chicago enforcement office

      Google’s Cloud AI lead on the three frontiers of model capability

      AMD agrees to backstop a $300M loan from Goldman Sachs for Crusoe to buy AMD AI chips, the first known case of AMD chips used as debt collateral (The Information)

      Productivity apps failed me when I needed them most

    • Gadgets

      macOS Tahoe 26.3.1 update will “upgrade” your M5’s CPU to new “super” cores

      Lenovo Shows Off a ThinkBook Modular AI PC Concept With Swappable Ports and Detachable Displays at MWC 2026

      POCO M8 Review: The Ultimate Budget Smartphone With Some Cons

      The Mission: Impossible of SSDs has arrived with a fingerprint lock

      6 Best Phones With Headphone Jacks (2026), Tested and Reviewed

    • Mobile

      Android’s March update is all about finding people, apps, and your missing bags

      Watch Xiaomi’s global launch event live here

      Our poll shows what buyers actually care about in new smartphones (Hint: it’s not AI)

      Is Strava down for you? You’re not alone

      The Motorola Razr FIFA World Cup 2026 Edition was literally just unveiled, and Verizon is already giving them away

    • Science

      Big Tech Signs White House Data Center Pledge With Good Optics and Little Substance

      Inside the best dark matter detector ever built

      NASA’s Artemis moon exploration programme is getting a major makeover

      Scientists crack the case of “screeching” Scotch tape

      Blue-faced, puffy-lipped monkey scores a rare conservation win

    • AI

      Online harassment is entering its AI era

      Meet NullClaw: The 678 KB Zig AI Agent Framework Running on 1 MB RAM and Booting in Two Milliseconds

      New method could increase LLM training efficiency | Ztoog

      The human work behind humanoid robots is being hidden

      NVIDIA Releases DreamDojo: An Open-Source Robot World Model Trained on 44,711 Hours of Real-World Human Video Data

    • Crypto

      SEC Vs. Justin Sun Case Ends In $10M Settlement

      Google paid startup Form Energy $1B for its massive 100-hour battery

      Ethereum Breakout Alert: Corrective Channel Flip Sparks Impulsive Wave

      Show Your ID Or No Deal

      Jane Street sued for alleged front-running trades that accelerated Terraform Labs meltdown

    Ztoog
    Home » Why Scientists Are Clashing Over the Atlantic’s Critical Currents
    Science

    Why Scientists Are Clashing Over the Atlantic’s Critical Currents

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    Why Scientists Are Clashing Over the Atlantic’s Critical Currents
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp

    So a lot on this planet will depend on a easy matter of density. In the Atlantic Ocean, a conveyor belt of heat water heads north from the tropics, reaching the Arctic and chilling. That makes it denser, so it sinks and heads again south, ending the loop. This system of currents, referred to as the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC, strikes 15 million cubic meters of water per second.

    In latest years, researchers have urged that due to local weather change, the AMOC present system may very well be slowing down and will finally collapse. A paper revealed yesterday in the journal Nature Communications warns that the collapse of the AMOC isn’t simply doable, however imminent. By this staff’s calculations, the circulation may shut down as early as 2025, and no later than 2095. 

    That’s a tipping level that may come a lot earlier than anybody thought. “We got scared by our own results,” says Susanne Ditlevsen, a statistician at the University of Copenhagen and coauthor of the new paper. “We checked and checked and checked and checked, and I do believe that they’re right. Of course, we might be wrong, and I hope we are.” But there’s vigorous debate in the scientific neighborhood over simply how shortly the AMOC would possibly decline, and the way finest to even determine that out.

    It’s abundantly clear to researchers that the Arctic is warming as much as 4 and a half instances quicker than the remainder of the planet. Arctic ice is melting at a tempo of about 150 billion metric tons per yr, says Marlos Goes, an oceanographer from the University of Miami and NOAA’s Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory who was not concerned with the new paper. Greenland’s ice sheet can be quickly declining, injecting extra freshwater into the sea. That deluge of freshwater is much less dense than saltwater, which means much less water sinks and fewer energy goes into the AMOC conveyor belt. 

    The penalties could be brutal and world. Without these heat waters, climate in Europe would get considerably colder—extra like that of comparable latitudes in Canada and the northern United States. “In model simulations, the collapse of the AMOC cools the North Atlantic and warms the South Atlantic, which may result in drastic precipitation changes throughout the world,” Goes says. “There would be changes in storm patterns over the continental areas, affecting the monsoon systems. Therefore, a future AMOC shutdown could bring massive migration, impacting ecological and agricultural production, and fish population displacement.” 

    Ditlevsen did her staff’s calculation through the use of measurements of Atlantic sea floor temperatures as a proxy for the AMOC. These readings go all the manner again to the 1870s, because of measurements taken by ship crews. This meant researchers may evaluate temperatures earlier than and after the begin of the wide-scale burning of fossil fuels and the ensuing modifications to the local weather. 

    Because the AMOC system entails heat water heading north from the tropics, if the circulation is slowing down, you’d anticipate finding cooler temperatures in the North Atlantic over time. And certainly, that’s what Ditlevsen’s group discovered, as soon as they compensated for the total warming of the world’s oceans on account of local weather change. “When it is established that the sea surface temperature record is the fingerprint of the AMOC, we can calculate the early warning signals of the forthcoming collapse and extrapolate to the tipping point,” says University of Copenhagen local weather scientist Peter Ditlevsen, coauthor of the new paper. (The Ditlevsens are siblings.)

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Science

    Big Tech Signs White House Data Center Pledge With Good Optics and Little Substance

    Science

    Inside the best dark matter detector ever built

    Science

    NASA’s Artemis moon exploration programme is getting a major makeover

    Science

    Scientists crack the case of “screeching” Scotch tape

    Science

    Blue-faced, puffy-lipped monkey scores a rare conservation win

    Science

    Big Tech Says Generative AI Will Save the Planet. It Doesn’t Offer Much Proof

    Science

    The experiments that could finally explain gravity

    Science

    Weird inside-out planet system may have formed one world at a time

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Follow Us
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    Top Posts
    Mobile

    Polestar’s smartphone appears on TENAA

    Polestar is a Chinese EV maker owned by Geely, the identical firm that owns Meizu…

    The Future

    Barriers to Adopting No-Code Technology, and How You Can Overcome Them

    In latest years, no-code expertise has emerged as a game-changer for companies of all sizes.…

    Technology

    Robot Videos: Weekly Collection of Robotics Videos

    Video Friday is your weekly choice of superior robotics movies, collected by your folks at…

    Mobile

    This new flagship phone has two zoom lenses, but only one zoom camera (wait, what?)

    TL;DR HUAWEI has introduced the Pura 80 collection of smartphones. The Pura 80 Ultra has…

    Gadgets

    Right to repair’s unlikely new adversary: Scientologists

    The right-to-repair motion has had its share of adversaries. From Big Tech to politicians and…

    Our Picks
    Gadgets

    Oppo Find X7 Ultra Review: Magnificent Camera

    Science

    Supernova neutrinos could break physics – if we can make sense of them

    Mobile

    Early Samsung Galaxy S24 release date and bold Unpacked event location choice tipped

    Categories
    • AI (1,560)
    • Crypto (1,827)
    • Gadgets (1,870)
    • Mobile (1,910)
    • Science (1,939)
    • Technology (1,862)
    • The Future (1,716)
    Most Popular
    AI

    Want agency in the AI age? Get ready to fight

    AI

    Symposium highlights scale of mental health crisis and novel methods of diagnosis and treatment | Ztoog

    The Future

    Elon Musk Announces Tesla Robotaxi To Be Unveiled On August 8

    Ztoog
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    © 2026 Ztoog.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.