ScienceThe most intense sunlight on Earth can be found...

The most intense sunlight on Earth can be found in the Atacama Desert


Forget Arizona or Florida — sun worshippers ought to head to the Atacama Desert in South America. It’s there that the sun’s rays on Earth are most intense, beating out places like Mount Everest and even, occasionally, rivaling the conditions on Venus, researchers report July 3 in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society.

Satellite data have suggested that the Altiplano — a high-altitude plateau in the Atacama that straddles parts of Chile, Bolivia, Peru and Argentina — experiences the most intense levels of sunlight on Earth. But since satellites look down on our planet’s surface from afar, it’s important to verify that claim with on-the-ground data, says Raúl Cordero, a physicist at the University of Santiago in Chile. “How good are these estimates?”

To answer that question, Cordero and colleagues set up a small atmospheric observatory, housed in two shipping containers, in the Chilean Altiplano. Since 2016, the researchers have been measuring solar radiation levels at the site using a pyranometer, a palm-sized instrument sensitive to ultraviolet, visible and near-infrared light.

A photo of a researcher working high in the Andes Mountains of Chile sets up an instrument to measure solar radiation.
A researcher working high in the Andes Mountains of Chile sets up an instrument to measure solar radiation.R. Cordero

Based on the first five years of data from the observatory, the average amount of solar power hitting each square meter of the landscape — 308 watts — is consistent with the earlier satellite observations and even higher than values recorded by a pyranometer near the summit of Mount Everest, the team reports.

The researchers also captured bursts of extremely intense solar radiation. One event, in January 2017, blasted the site with 2,177 watts per square meter — more than seven times the average. The intensity of that burst and others like it rivals solar radiation on Venus, which is over 40 million kilometers closer to the sun than Earth is (SN: 2/13/18). Such events, which typically last just a few minutes, are caused by thin clouds scattering light toward the ground, the researchers suggest.



Original Source Link

Latest News

Crazy Town Frontman Shifty Shellshock’s Death Being Investigated As Possible Drug Overdose

Sadly we guess this news was inevitable… When we learned Shifty Shellshock, frontman of the iconic 2000s rap-rock band Crazy Town,...

AI tools are coming to Gmail, Google Drive, and Firefox

AI rolls into more of your everyday interactions, as Google and Firefox begin adding AI modules. If you’ve been...

Play Games, Win Bitcoin With THNDR Games CEO Desiree Dickerson

Company Name: THNDR GamesFounder: Desiree Dickerson, Jack Everitt, Greg Flor and Rafal GawelDate Founded: Originally founded in 2019...

Minimum tax on billionaires would raise up to $250bn a year, says report

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly...

Meta tests Vision Pro-like freeform virtual screen placement for Quest headsets

Meta is testing a feature for its Quest headsets that allows you to place windows freely, similar to...

The Best of Reason: What If the U.S. Cuts Off Aid to Israel?

This week's featured article is "What If the U.S. Cuts Off Aid to Israel?" by Matt Welch. This...

Must Read

- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you