Miscellaneous -
Light Pollution
Since
before the dawn of civilisation, it has enchanted
and awed humanity. But the night sky, a majestic
panoply of comets, constellations and galaxies,
has now vanished for much of the population of
Britain. An impenetrable fug of light pollution,
caused by the huge rise in artificial lighting at
night from street lamps, factories and airports,
means that the heavens above are banished beyond
the glow of neon and sodium lighting. Man has
destroyed his view of the stars in a matter of
decades. Astronomers from the Royal Observatory
in Greenwich estimate that just 2 per cent of the
UK remains unaffected by the 'creeping cancer' of
light pollution. Others estimate that at least 90
per cent of the population is seriously affected
by 'sky glow'.
In the UK, around 85 per cent of the population
live in urban areas where ubiquitous street
lighting nullifies the glory of a cloudless night
sky. "It takes the light from the rest of
the universe hundreds, thousands, even millions
of years to reach here. What a shame to lose it
in the last millisecond of its journey,"
said Bob Mizon, co-ordinator of the Campaign for
Dark Skies. Only the most isolated, thinly
populated depths of Scotland and Wales and the
heart of England's national parks remain truly
dark. More than half the present generation of
children has never seen the Milky Way, the
luminescent band of interstellar gases and stars
that stretches from horizon to horizon. But the
real fear for astronomers is that hardly any of
the next generation will be able to share in such
celestial beauty.
The extraordinary expansion of light pollution is
exposed in satellite images obtained by The
Observer from the National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in Washington.
Taken in March 1984 and March 2003, they betray a
startling expansion of light. England in
particular is smothered almost entirely with the
effect of outdoor lights. It reveals an island
trapped in a bubble of light as billions of watts
are poured into the heavens from signs, security
lights, floodlights and 6.2 million street lamps.
"A person in the UK would distinguish fewer
stars in the sky than ever before. Even in a dark
area they could probably observe the glow of a
city on the horizon," said Ruth Hobson of
the NOAA.
Yet during the Fifties only half the UK was
affected by sky glow, according to experts from
the British Astronomical Association. "There
is nowhere in mainland Britain that is safe from
light pollution," added Ruth, "Even in
Orkney, the viewing is marred by the light from
oil installations and offshore tugs. It only
takes one large lamp to block out the view. This
is a serious national problem, it's not just some
astronomers whingeing." A recent atlas of
'artificial night sky brightness' by Italian
scientists investigated how much of a country's
population could not see the Milky Way. The world
average was 21 per cent. In the UK, this rose to
55 per cent, one of the worst on the planet, and
the trend is starting to affect wildlife.
Glow-worms, which need a dark environment to
thrive, have declined rapidly over the past 30
years.
Kate Parminster, chief executive of the CPRE,
believes the next generation will be completely
isolated from the rest of the universe behind a
bank of artificial light. "We're fast losing
one of the most beautiful and amazing things
nature has to offer us,' she said. 'Already most
of us live in places where light pollution is so
bad that we'll never glimpse our own galaxy, the
Milky Way." The growth of rural crime is
partly blamed for the trend, encouraging the
proliferation of motion-sensitive security
lighting whose tendency to switch on with every
passing cat lights up the most remote locations.
Many are too sensitive and too bright.
But the loss of the night vista is slowly being
taken seriously. A committee of MPs last month
began an inquiry into the effects of light
pollution. The astronomer Sir Patrick Moore
welcomed it and told of the 'real menace.' Yet
concern lags far behind that of our European
neighbours, particularly the Czech Republic
where, two weeks ago, astronomers pushed through
the world's first countrywide law to reduce light
pollution. In the meantime the Department for
Transport will continue compiling an inventory of
how many street lamps have a heavy hood to ensure
that light is directed down on to the road.
The issue remains largely ignored among
architects and urban designers, who believe the
more light shines into the darkness the better.
Controversial schemes include Barnsley's vast
'halo of light' as part of the town's
regeneration plan. Dr Robert Massey, of the Royal
Observatory, said, "It is a major heritage
issue, yet it's very difficult to escape the
problem.How many children have seen the Milky
Way, one of the most magical things in the
sky?" Scientists estimate that on a clear,
dark night between 2,000 and 3,000 stars should
be visible.
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