Astronomy in a Low-Carbon Future

C. Matzner, N. Cowan, R. Doyon, V. H'enault-Brunet, David Lafrenere, M. Lokken, P. Martin, S. Morsink, M. Normandeau, N. Ouellette, Mubdi Rahman, J. Roediger, James Taylor, Robert P. Thacker, M. Kerkwijk
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引用次数: 12

Abstract

The global climate crisis poses new risks to humanity, and with them, new challenges to the practices of professional astronomy. Avoiding the more catastrophic consequences of global warming by more than 1.5 degrees requires an immediate reduction of greenhouse gas emissions. According to the 2018 United Nations Intergovernmental Panel report, this will necessitate a 45% reduction of emissions by 2030 and net-zero emissions by 2050. Efforts are required at all levels, from the individual to the governmental, and every discipline must find ways to achieve these goals. This will be especially difficult for astronomy with its significant reliance on conference and research travel, among other impacts. However, our long-range planning exercises provide the means to coordinate our response on a variety of levels. We have the opportunity to lead by example, rising to the challenge rather than reacting to external constraints. We explore how astronomy can meet the challenge of a changing climate in clear and responsible ways, such as how we set expectations (for ourselves, our institutions, and our granting agencies) around scientific travel, the organization of conferences, and the design of our infrastructure. We also emphasize our role as reliable communicators of scientific information on a problem that is both human and planetary in scale.
低碳未来的天文学
全球气候危机给人类带来了新的风险,也给专业天文学的实践带来了新的挑战。为了避免全球变暖造成超过1.5度的灾难性后果,需要立即减少温室气体排放。根据2018年联合国政府间专门委员会的报告,这将需要到2030年减少45%的排放量,到2050年实现净零排放。从个人到政府的各个层面都需要努力,每个学科都必须找到实现这些目标的方法。这对天文学来说尤其困难,因为它严重依赖会议和研究旅行,以及其他影响。然而,我们的长期规划工作提供了在不同层次上协调我们的反应的手段。我们有机会以身作则,迎接挑战,而不是对外部限制做出反应。我们探索天文学如何以明确和负责任的方式应对气候变化的挑战,比如我们如何设定(对我们自己、我们的机构和我们的资助机构)对科学旅行、会议组织和基础设施设计的期望。我们还强调我们作为关于人类和地球问题的科学信息的可靠传播者的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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