Abstract
LIFE IN A TECHNICALLY advanced society like ours is increasingly dependent on an understanding of atmospheric behavior. Food, travel, recreation, commerce and these and many other major aspects of the daily duties of men are strongly affected by the vicissitudes of weather and climate. Even the subtle joys of life turn upon wind and storm, as with the smell of rain in a wheat field, the flowers on a mountain hillside, the beauty of a sunset or even the opportunity to see a sunset at all. Deliberate and inadvertant actions that change the atmosphere are becoming increasingly crucial to the welfare of man and his environment. Theories of climate control are numerous but unsatisfactory. The Global Atmospheric Research Program will reveal new answers to the problems. © 1967, Acoustical Society of America. All rights reserved.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Roberts, W. O. (1967). Climate control. Physics Today, 20(8), 30–36. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3034424
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