Title:
Global climate change and human life
Author:
Khalil, Aslam, author.
ISBN:
9780470665794
9780470665787
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
xi, 273 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
General Note:
Includes index.
Contents:
The framework -- Atmospheric composition -- Mass balance theory and small models -- Transport processes -- Mechanisms of sources and sinks -- Balance of climate gases and aerosols -- The science of climate -- Instructive climate models -- Climate feedbacks -- Match of climate change observed and modeled -- Population, affluence, and global change -- Impacts of climate change on human life -- Climate management -- Possible futures.
Abstract:
"In our time, the global population has become large enough to cause perceptible environmental changes all over the world. With it, a new science of global change has emerged, mostly as a practical matter to understand and manage the earth's habitability and create a sustainable environment for some time to come -- one which balances the benefits of technological and societal advances with their potentially harmful or undesirable side effects. These concerns began with the depletion of the ozone layer and its possible adverse consequences on human health, and have, in recent decades, shifted to climate change driven by an ongoing global warming. Why are these global climatic changes occurring? How will they affect our lives? If we find the effects undesirable, what should we do? Global Climate Change and Human Life will attempt to answer these questions. It will show how to accomplish the goal of managing our climate, what it will take, and when it needs to be done. The book is a comprehensive and cohesive look at the emerging field of global change science. Using models that translate the theoretical or conceptual understanding into minimalistic mathematical forms, the book lays out a holistic view of the science that develops and teaches the main principles, concepts and conclusions. Moreover, the book aims to empower readers to use the scientific method to decide how important and timely climate change is as a social issue and which solutions can succeed."--Back cover.
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