In Case of Climate Emergency: Deploying Space Bubbles To Block Out the Sun

Space Bubbles

If climate change has already gone too far, what could be our emergency solutions? Credit: MIT

“Space Bubbles” – The Deflection of Solar Radiation Using Thin-Film Inflatable Bubble Rafts

An interdisciplinary group of scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology is exploring a space-based solar shield to reduce incoming radiation on Earth’s surface—hence combatting climate change.

As the Earth’s temperature increases, the question of humanity’s response to climate change grows more urgent: has our negative already impact gone too far? Is it too late for us to reverse the damage done?

A proposal currently being developed by a transdisciplinary team at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) suggests an approach that would supplement current climate mitigation and adaptation solutions. ‘Space Bubbles,’ inspired by an idea originally proposed by astronomer Robert Angel, is based on the deployment of a raft in space consisting of small, inflatable bubbles with the goal of shielding the Earth from a small portion of solar radiation.

Space Bubbles Sun Earth

Geoengineering might be our final and only option. Yet, most geoengineering proposals are earth-bound, which poses tremendous risks to our living ecosystem. Credit: MIT

This project is part of a solar-geoengineering approach—a set of technologies aiming to reflect a fraction of sunlight coming to the Earth—to contest climate change. Unlike other Earth-based geoengineering efforts, such as dissolving gases in the stratosphere for increasing its albedo effect, this method would not interfere directly with our biosphere and therefore would pose fewer risks to altering our already fragile ecosystems. The raft itself (researchers hypothesize a craft roughly the size of Brazil) composed of frozen bubbles would be suspended in space near the L1 Lagrangian Point, a location between the Earth and the sun where the gravitational influence of both the sun and the Earth cancel out.

This proposal addresses many questions: How to engineer the best material for the bubbles to withstand outer space conditions? How to fabricate and deploy these bubbles in space? How to make the shield fully reversible? What are the potential long-term effects on Earth’s ecosystem?


While addressing climate change necessarily requires lowering CO2 emission on the Earth, other approaches such as geoengineering could supplement such efforts if current mitigation and adaptation measures turned out to be inadequate for reversing the ongoing climate change trends.[1] In particular, solar geoengineering—a set of technologies aiming to reflect a fraction of sunlight coming to the Earth—has been theoretically proved to be a valuable solution for supplementing current efforts for CO2 emission reductions.[2]

Space Bubbles Solar Deflection

Building on the work of Roger Angel, who first proposed using thin reflective films in outer space, we produced an innovative solution that is easily deployable and fully reversible. Credit: MIT

Solar geoengineering is one of the least extensively researched topics in climate science technologies. Most research efforts have concentrated on dissolving reflective chemical components in the troposphere or stratosphere that would offset the incoming solar radiation,[3] facing issues of irreversibility and further greenhouse effects. Space-based geoengineering provides an opportunity to solve the problem with no direct effect on stratospheric chemistry.

James Early[4] proposed the idea of a multilayer deflective film to be deployed at the Lagrangian Point (L1, see Figure 1a) in between the Sun and the Earth decreasing the incident sunlight by 1.8%. Roger Angel,[5] building on Early’s research, investigated the idea of a swarm of small spacecraft unfolding smaller shields, proposing an early feasibility plan for the technology. The main challenges associated with the above proposals are the complexity of pre-fabricating a large film, and transporting and unfolding it in outer space. Other ideas include creating a cloud of dust from asteroids[6] at L1, which poses the problem of keeping the material confined. Among the issues with the existing approaches: the amount of material needed, the difficulty of in-space fabrication, and the non-reversibility of such geoengineering projects.

Space Bubbles Deflective Raft

The bubbles could be manufactured directly in outer space, forming an extensive deflective raft positioned at the Lagrangian Point between the Earth and the Sun. Credit: MIT

In general, most research has not moved from a rough feasibility study stage yet. In this proposal, we are bringing together an interdisciplinary team of MIT scientists to do a next level of feasibility. As a working hypothesis, we propose to explore the idea of shielding solar radiation by deploying a set of bubble rafts composed of arrays of interconnected small inflatable bubbles (see Figure 1b) close to the Lagrangian Point L1 in between the Sun and the Earth.

We believe that inflating thin-film spheres directly in space from a homogeneous molten material–such as silicon–can provide the variation in thickness that refracts a broader wave spectrum and allows us to avoid the necessity of launching large structural film elements. Spheres can be directly manufactured in space, optimizing shipping costs. Moreover, as bubbles can be intentionally destroyed by breaking their surface equilibrium, this would make the solar geoengineering solution fully reversible and significantly reduce space debris. Please note, however, that the bubble raft is only a working hypothesis at the moment, and it could be revised during the white paper preparation.

Interdisciplinary in its nature, the project involves an array of research problems in a number of disciplines, from the optics and mechanics of thin-films in space, to the impact of shading on the Earth, to the public policy implementation. Subsections below present the major challenges and preliminary strategies of tackling them [with disciplines involved]:

Material

A fundamental phase in this project is selecting the right material and technology to fabricate and maintain thin-film spheres in outer space conditions. In our preliminary experiments, we succeeded at inflating a thin-film bubble at a pressure of 0.0028 atm, and maintaining it at around –50°C (to approximate space conditions of zero pressure and near-zero temperature, see Figure 1c).

Further research will investigate the use of other types of low vapor-pressure materials to rapidly inflate and assemble bubble rafts (including silicon-based melts, and graphene-reinforced Ionic Liquids which have ultra-low vapor pressures and relatively low densities); key design metrics include the viscous, interfacial thermal properties of the bubble formers during inflation as well as the optical and structural properties of the bubble rafts when exposed to sun radiation. [material sciences, mechanical engineering, fluid dynamics]

Space Bubbles Figure

Figure 1 – (a) L1 Lagrangian point location as described in [5] (b) Bubble raft on a water surface (courtesy University of Wisconsin) (c) Frozen ~20 mm-diameter thin-film bubble at 0.0028 atm (experiment carried out at MIT). Credit: MIT

Mass density and cost efficiency

We will study whether a bubble-based shield is mass-efficient compared to other proposed shading solutions. As thin fluid spheres are inflated, the minimal thickness of the liquid film forming the shell can theoretically be as low as 20nm due to surface disjoining pressure and to the Marangoni effect. However, in order to deflect solar light, the shells’ thickness should be comparable to solar wavelengths (i.e. on the order of 400-600 nm). Our initial calculations, considering liquid-based spherical bubbles, suggest that the resulting raft’s expected mass density would be <1.5 g/m2, on par with the lightest shield proposed by Angel.[3-5] [physics, optics]

Position and stabilization of the raft

While at the L1 Lagrangian point gravitational forces from the Earth and the Sun cancel out, a wide and thin bubble raft would be significantly exposed to solar radiation pressure, suggesting that the optimal location should be identified slightly closer to the Sun, approximately 2.5 Gm from the earth. An active stabilization mechanism is needed and will have to be designed, preferably through geometry modification [aerospace engineering, planetary sciences, robotics]

Space Bubbles Deflective Raft Close

At labs at MIT, they have tested bubbles in outer space conditions that could be one of the most efficient thin-film structures for deflecting solar radiation. Credit: MIT

Shading capacity

Previous geoengineering research[2,3] suggests that in order to reverse the effects of climate change incoming solar radiation should be reduced by 1.8%, even if smaller percentages would be enough for supplementing global warming mitigations initiatives on Earth.[7] A solar radiation reflection model will be built and used to determine the optical properties of the bubble raft, while a deeper analysis with climate models will identify the desired solar radiation reduction fraction. [physics, optics, climate sciences]

Space production and delivery

Possibly a significant advantage of a bubble raft is the possibility of in-situ assembly using space-based fabrication methods.. Bubbles can be rapidly inflated inside the production unit, then rapidly frozen and released into zeropressure and low-temperature space. The coordination of the process of delivery, raw material transfer, inflation, and the coordination of the resulting bubble rafts will be studied. Moreover, novel ways of shipping the material from the earth will be investigated, including magnetic accelerators (railgun) as already proposed in the literature. [aerospace engineering, mechanical engineering, robotics]

Maintenance and reversibility

If a bubble raft is no longer needed, sheets of thin spheres are easy to destroy by breaking their surface equilibrium and collapsing them from their metastable equilibrium point to a lower energy configuration. This minimizes debris compared to other proposed approaches, and makes it safer and more resilient in case of impacts with other objects. The maintenance of such a fragile shield is a challenge, and an effective replenishment rate will be studied to ensure the shield maintains its size, together with strategies to guarantee a smooth end-of-life transition. [climate sciences, aerospace engineering]

Impact on Earth’s climate and ecosystem

Despite the remote location from Earth’s atmosphere, some studies suggest that complex phenomena may arise on Earth’s climate as a consequence of the reduction of solar radiation, such as the weakening of extratropical storm tracks.[8] This aspect will be further investigated with different solar radiation reduction fractions. Furthermore, a phase-out approach will be designed, to avoid an Earth’s ecosystem shock of a sudden termination of the geoengineering program when it will no longer be needed (studies identify the needed lifetime in a range from 50 to 200 years).[7] [environmental engineering, climate sciences]

Public policy implications

How to get the most synergies between emission cuts and solar geoengineering is a public policy problem that needs careful investigation. Moreover, research will be done on the following topics: how to overcome political opposition and political fear; how to avoid what has been referred to as a “moral hazard”;[9] how to make the project economically sustainable; how to open-source the solution design for a widespread engagement. [political sciences, economics]

In the next phase of the project, formal analyses and simulations of the aforementioned topics will be conducted, together with preliminary laboratory production experimentation. If indeed the bubble raft concept does turn out as the most valuable solution (from cost and mass density considerations), further research will be needed for improving the design, fabricating a test bubble raft in lower orbit, and, if successful, test the deployment in outer space.

In its largest extent, as discussed by Roger Angel,[5] the system could offset 100% of the effect of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. We believe that once a technical solution is identified, implementation could happen before the end of the century, when the most severe consequences of climate change are currently predicted. In terms of cost, an initial estimate was suggested by Roger Angel as approximately 0.5% of global GDP over 50 years; furthering feasibility as proposed here will help us arrive at more accurate estimates. In short, we believe that advancing feasibility of a solar shield to the next level could constitute a supplementary plan for a low carbon transition on Earth–and in any case help us make more informed decisions in the years to come should geoengineering approaches become urgent.

Principal Investigators

  • Carlo Ratti, MIT Senseable City Lab (lead)
  • Charles Primmerman, MIT Lincoln Laboratory
  • Daniela Rus, MIT CSAIL
  • Gareth McKinley, MIT Mechanical Engineering
  • Markus Buehler, MIT Civil and Environmental

Engineering Advisors

  • Gabriele Santambrogio, European Laboratory for Nonlinear Spectroscopy
  • Lawrence Susskind, MIT DUSP

References:

  1. Brown, P., Caldeira, K. (2017) “Greater future global warming inferred from Earth’s recent energy budget”, Nature 552
    DOI: 10.1038/nature24672
  2. Keith, D. W., Wagner, G., Zabel, C. (2017) “Solar geoengineering reduces atmospheric carbon burden”, Nature Climate Change 7
    DOI: 10.1038/nclimate3376
  3. Keith, D. W., Weisenstein, D. K., Dykema, J. A., Keutsch, F. N. (2016) “Solar geoengineering without ozone loss”, PNAS 113-52
    DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1615572113
  4. Early, J. T. (1989) “Space-based solar shield to offset green-house effect”, Journal of the British Interplanetary Society 42
  5. Angel, R. (2006) “Feasibility of cooling the Earth with a cloud of small spacecraft near the inner Lagrange point (L1)”, PNAS 103-46
    DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0608163103
  6. Bewick, R., Sanchez, J. P. , McInnes, C. R. (2012) “Gravitationally bound geoengineering dust shade at the inner Lagrange point,” Adv. in Space Research 50-10
    DOI: 10.1016/j.asr.2012.07.008
  7. MacMartin, D. G., Caldeira, K., Keith, D. W. (2014) “Solar geoengineering to limit the rate of temperature change”, Philosophical Trans. of the Royal Society A 372
    DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2014.0134
  8. Gertler, C. G., O’Gorman, P. A., et al. (2020) “Weakening of the extratropical storm tracks in solar geoengineering scenarios”, Geophysical Research Letters 47
    DOI: 10.1029/2020GL087348
  9. Lin, A. (2013) “Does Geoengineering Present a Moral Hazard?”, Ecology Law Quarterly 40-3

8 Comments on "In Case of Climate Emergency: Deploying Space Bubbles To Block Out the Sun"

  1. Goofy solutions to imaginary problems.

  2. Clemons Kunkel | July 17, 2022 at 6:42 am | Reply

    Call it Man-Made Climate Change not climate change because people think it’s mother nature and it’s not. We are in the stage of solar Maxima and that’s a bad thing because we were heating up 12 years we haven’t even seen hot yet but we’re going to. Scientists have been wanting us for years and going the wrong direction. Greed of money is the problem. The world needs to go green but they love money too much. Cool concept with the bubbles. Stay safe put the mask on because covid-19 is not done with us. It’s like people forgot it’s still a global pandemic.

  3. These are the same scientists who, when I was a kid, wanted to do wackos things to heat the planet as they believed we were heading to another ice age.

  4. Our climate change because we cut off forests which regulate water circulation in ecosystem. We heat Earth because we make it dry. CO2 is nothing to do with climate change.

  5. These are all those losers with bad grades who couldn’t get a real job – don’t listen to them.

  6. Annie Morrall | July 27, 2022 at 5:16 am | Reply

    No no no and no

  7. CO2 reduction is not working fast enough and is very costly. Clearly a backup plan is needed. Why not spend a little money on solar geoengineering R&D?

  8. Blocking out most of the sun definitely won’t cause an ice age (maybe not likely, but possible). This could also have effects on entire ecosystems. More specifically, plants. By reducing light needed to function properly can be detrimental to growth and development which then effect organisms depending on them. Then this leads to problems with other animals depending on these ones. (Again, this is purely theoretical and I can be blowing it way out of proportion, but you never know!)

Leave a Reply to Kosmita Cancel reply

Email address is optional. If provided, your email will not be published or shared.