ABOUT COSMIC LOG

Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

Check out Boyle's biography or send a message to Cosmic Log via cosmiclog@msnbc.com.



Embrace the dark side

Posted: Friday, March 28, 2008 7:20 PM by Alan Boyle


AP
These photos show the skyline of Sydney in Australia before and during Earth Hour
in 2007. On Saturday, about 200 cities around the world are due to take part.

Lights are going dark for a round-the-world, voluntary rolling blackout at 8 p.m. local time Saturday. Earth Hour - which originated in Australia a year ago and is now going global, thanks to the World Wildlife Fund - focuses awareness on saving energy and doing something about climate change. But the turn to the dark side didn't just begin last year, and it's about much more than one consciousness-raising hour. Saturday night also marks the beginning of a whole week of activities aimed at making our skies darker for good.

National Dark-Sky Week got its start five years ago - and this year, the week's organizers are teaming up with Earth Hour (as well as the folks behind Lights Out America) to support Saturday's hourlong celebration of the dark side. In hundreds of cities around the world, people will be dousing their lights from 8 to 9 p.m. local time as a symbolic gesture for action on the climate change issue.

During that hour, some folks will be hosting Earth Hour candlelight dinners. Others will be staging glow-in-the-dark Frisbee games. But for stargazers, Earth Hour and Dark-Sky Week offer golden opportunities to see the night sky the way it was meant to be seen, at least partly free of the glare from urban lights. That's why scores of astronomy clubs are sponsoring star parties over the next few nights. (To find a club near you, check this Web link, and this one, plus this one, and this one.)

"National Dark-Sky Week is a great opportunity to dust off the old telescope from the attic and share in the wonder of the universe that has been part of the human tradition for thousands of years," the event's founder, Jennifer Barlow, said in a statement distributed by the International Dark-Sky Association.

The association's senior technical adviser, Pete Strasser, said surveys have shown that 90 percent or more of all Americans younger than 18 have never seen the glow of the Milky Way galaxy with their own eyes. "They literally don't know what they're missing," Strasser said.

People may think it has to be that way in order to protect the streets from predators that lurk in the dark. But Strasser, who lives in Tucson, Ariz., said that's mostly a case of "fearmongering."

He said the fault lies in poorly designed urban lighting systems, which waste most of their light by shining it up into the sky.

"Our crime rate is no higher or worse than any other community's, and yet I can see the Milky Way from my driveway at night, in an area with a population of over a million people," he said.

In Strasser's view, Americans can have their safety as well as the stars. "Our organization says 'Dark-Sky,' it doesn't say 'dark ground,'" he said. "Reasonable lighting practices will solve the problem."

Street lights, for example, can be shielded on top so that more of the light is aimed directly on the ground, and less of it is wasted on the sky. At home, outdoor lighting systems can be equipped with timers and sensors to keep the lights dark when they're not needed. Environmentally friendly, energy-efficient lamps can make a huge difference. The Dark-Sky Association's list of frequently asked questions provides plenty of tips and loads of Web links.

Stargazers will be among the big beneficiaries of darker skies, to be sure, but there'll be a benefit even if you don't look up into the heavens.

"The conception of the whole dark-sky impact has evolved from astronomical concerns into a broader spectrum. ... Of our 12,000 members, 5 percent are astronomers," Strasser said.

The wiser use of lighting - outdoors as well as indoors - is much more than a symbolic one-night gesture. Lighting represents as much as 25 percent of residential electrical use, and up-to-date technologies can cut that consumption by more than half. You can get those savings by switching to compact fluorescent lights or LEDs, by getting smarter about sensors, and by simply switching off the lights in empty rooms.

So as you turn off the lights for an hour on Saturday night, think about ways to improve the planet (and your view of the night sky) during the other 8,759 hours of the year.

For more about Earth Hour, check out this dispatch from NBC Field Notes. For more about light pollution, there's this report from U.S. News and World Report. And to see the glories of the night sky from your computer, click through the latest installment of our "Space Shots" slide show.

Update for 3:05 a.m. ET March 29: Based on the comments coming in, some people may have gotten the misimpression that the cities participating in Earth Hour would somehow shut down the power grid or force people to turn their lights off.  This event is totally voluntary, and of course no one will force you to go dark. I'd expect that traffic lights and other lights judged essential for public safety will stay on as usual.

In the Earth Hour cities, there will be special events, and I'm betting that a lot of the lights that are kept burning in empty offices may be turned off for at least an hour. But it's totally up to you whether you want to turn any of the lights off at your house. I've added the word "voluntary" in the frst paragraph in hopes that will make the situation clearer. Check the Earth Hour Web site for lists of cities that are project partners or supporters.

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

I hope there's a satellite pic...Earth at night...dark...no rims of light along the coastlines...pretty wild...
I wonder what uses more energy: starting all those lights again at the end of the hour, or leaving them on for an hour.  Turning lights off when you leave a room will only save energy if you aren't going back soon.
All lights on from 8 to 9 on Saturday..... Got it!
Steve, there's a NASA Picture of the Day that shows a composite image of the earth at night without any clouds.  It's a composite image of several hundred/thousand pictures to create the image.

http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap040822.html
Actually the power required to turn on lights has been proven to be next to nothing.
you mean 8,765 hours. since year is 365.25 days long. YES I are bored.
Jason, that is an urban myth.  Lights use more energy per second only for a very short time when they turn on.  If you are gone from the room more than a minute, you would save energy if you turn them off.  

Jason, leaving the lights on for an hour uses more energy than starting them up. An episode of Mythbusters showed the break-even point where it becomes more efficient to turn the light off to be 23 seconds for fluorescent lights and under a second for all others.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MythBusters_(season_4)#Lights_On.2FOff

Jason, that's not true.  It does not use any more energy to stsrt up an incandescent light.  With a fluorescent bulb there is a brief surge, but it only amounts to a couple of seconds use.
See below:
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?
id=turn-fluorescent-lights-off-when-you-leave-room&sc=rss
I plan to celebrate this event by "TURNING ON ALL THE HOUSE LIGHTS AND IF I HAD SEARCHLIGHTS, THEY WOULD ALSO BE ON".
Just freaking wonderful, another do nothing, feel good, environmentalist whackjob, screwy behavior event. Pardon me while I find the carbon arc lamp and get it ready.
SO.  INCREDIBLY.   STUPID.   Absolutely insipid.  Please, stop indulging these whack jobs.  Tell them if they want to "send statements", to instead write long letters to distant relatives.  Just stop trying to evangelize such nonsense. [...]
If you could see the event from a stable gravitational position in space (L5?), you would see a rolling blackout just beyond the sunset terminator line. It'd be interesting to see some time-lapse or video imagery of the light-dark-light - comparable to this view of the recent lunar eclipse's effect on Earth:

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/
Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id=17963
I simply do not understand why this isn't major headline news across this country.  I love the idea.  I support the motion and will certainly participate.  I just don't understand why this has not been advertised and pushed throughout the media.  I'm very disappointed.
Harry Bilgewater & BB: Too bad we can't harness your negative energy! Log off if you're not interested!
thats so great!!!!!! i would love to be a part of this every yr. Its about time we all focus on mother earth. GO green!
Yeah, and let's all not buy gas next Thursday, too!
What a crock - this global warming crowd won't stop coming up with this kind of feel good stuff.  For me - I plan to light up my house so bright during the "dark hour" that you'll be able to see it from Mars.  
Like my boy Trace Adkins sings...

(On Saturday night...) "EVERY LIGHT IN THE HOUSE IS ON-N-N-N-N-N!!!!"
Wonderful! Emailed a message about it to everyone in my address. One hour once a year isn't too much to ask. However, the entire earth will not be dark at the same time, as some people are suggesting. It's a rolling blackout that will move from East to West as each time zone reaches 8 pm.
mike blane...that's one I've seen...I wanna see one with no lights...
click the name below for a comment RE the pic mike mentions...
i do it ever year! why not? in case steve ever gets his wish a sat pict of a dark US would be cool to see!
BTW much easier to see border problems in the dark! Cities who do it might be a tad crazy as it gives drunk drivers yet another reason why:(. It is the only time a child in like NY, and cities like it, the chance to see, a ,star, let alone 2 trillion. I guess it a real easte thing location location location. Kool thought though!
The bueaty of a night sky has always been one of the joys for us that live in the desert southwest.  I hope the rest of the world will treasure it as much as we do.
How about turning off all computers? It would create less heat, waste less electricity and help with global warming. It would save a lot more energy than a light bulb being turned off. Think of all the heat created by your computer.
If the greenies wish to amuse themselves with this voluntary exercise, what should the rest of us care?
Hopefully none of the those compact fluorescent bulbs (CFL) break and release mercury when the huge power surge occurs when eveyone turns power back on at same time...gotta go, another CFL just burned out and need to toss into the trash...
To turn off the lights for an hour is fantastic. I have so many lights here that I can barely see mars on a clear night. Dan ST CLOUD MN
My 17 year old who wants to be an environmental engineer, told me it costs 25 cents to burn a light bulb for an hour.  I learned something from him!  Now, when will we have a save gasoline day!  I hope we can teach awareness to the kids as well, not buying gas guzzling automobiles.  Teach them to conserve....not abuse.
Very in line with my home Sedona, AZ. Lovely perspectives arrive while gazing at the Milky Way regularly.
oh, goody, goody, goody!!!!

Time to be seen by satellite with  another 300+ car tire BONFIRE!!!!!!
This is a GREAT IDEA! Every bit Counts!! I would love to see the All of us across the world honor (1)hours of Lights Off! :)  Maybe we could extend this to Twice per year.
GO GREEN!!!
A list of the cities participating would be nice.

"and all I ask is a tall ship
and a star to steer her by...

The Ancient Mariner (poem -forget the author's name at the moment, sorry)
Great!  Another way for Brother Al to push his propaganda down our throats....talk about inconvenience and so much for Free Agency.  Heil Al!!
Global warming is a way for the government to control its' citizens.  As for me, I will turn on every one of my lights.  
LOVE IT!  Lights out here!  Are for the most part anyway!  My 3 bedroom home with fridge, washer, dryer, electric stove, oven and water heater..bill runs less than 50 bucks a month.  Durng the summer, temp at 80 in home.  Never runs over 75 bucks.  Yes indeed it works.  Conserve and enjoy the night sky.
'-)
How are businesses supposed to run with no power?
people are trying to make a living out there.

what a bunch of crap, its a terrible idea
turn off......tune out.....drop in
I expect that if all the East Coast US lighting was shut down at once, the generators would unload and cause an enormous voltage spike on the grid. Then, if the grid withstands that situation, the re-lighting will cause a corresponding voltage sag on the grid which might shut down things for more than another hour. Then the power companies will send us all a bill for fixing the problems.  
Ok............Harry Bilgefiller or whoever else dissed the idea.  Do you even bother to recycle?  I am betting that you also have no children or people that you care about for the future?  Until people got concerned about Lake Erie and pollution in the 70's nothing changed..........What's the problem if it helps change things for the better?
it is about time, that we help to save mother earth.i will shut off all my lights, sat.night.it is a small thing to do.
ummm yeah one hours gonna make a huge difference  next theyll want us to go back to living in caves and staring at the new thing called fire.these same people that are pushing to save the planet drive around in ozone depleting cars, hypocrits.
A city in the dark, I hope its well protected. I will have my candle on. " I see the light"
This kind of stuff is full of c--p and should not even be talked about.  Dont these people have anything better to talk about!
Aargh! Why did Nickelodeon have to air the Kids Choice Awards then!  It will be hard to keep the television off tomorrow night with tweens in the house!  We will watch by candlelight, though!
I understand that this event was "successful" in Australia last year, but must ask what thier definition  is for successful. For me, in order for this event to be trully successful, a significant number of people would have to be motivated to change their energy consumption habits. Until that actually happens all these, what did someone say,"screwy behavior events" (really, how rude) ARE all for naught. I'm going to participate, but I question this events effect.
"I simply do not understand why this isn't major headline news across this country.  I love the idea.  I support the motion and will certainly participate.  I just don't understand why this has not been advertised and pushed throughout the media.  I'm very disappointed."

ANSWER: Because no one is making money when the lights are OFF (a word from our sponsor).
I certainly hope our lights are not turned off in the Dallas area.  I cannot tell you how difficult it is for this Senior Citizen to reset clocks, timers, the Cable TV, etc, etc.  This sounds just plain stupid.
reminds me of the turn off the tv nights for families.  We've turned our cable off do not miss it a bit.  I would love to see more turn off the light/tv events.  Perhaps families and neighbors would be close again.  tell me do you know your neighbors??  I LOVE THIS IDEA!!  PARTY TIME!!!
Too bad we can't harness all of the ignorance in the world as a clean energy source...
A city in the dark, I hope its well protected. I will have my candle on. " I see the light"


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

TRACKBACKS

Trackbacks are links to weblogs that reference this post. Like comments, trackbacks do not appear until approved by us. The trackback URL for this post is: http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/trackback.aspx?PostID=834874

Latest Tech & Science News

Syndicate This Site

Add Cosmic Log to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google