Albedo measures the reflectivity of a surface (like snow or asphalt). Discover how it influences global climate, glacier melt, and urban warming.
Albedo is a key concept in climatology and meteorology that determines how much solar energy is reflected by a surface. From bright snow to dark asphalt, albedo affects Earth’s energy balance and plays a crucial role in climate change.
In this article, you’ll learn:
✔ What albedo is and how it’s measured
✔ Why snow has high albedo and oceans have low albedo
✔ How it influences local and global climate
✔ Practical examples (urban heat islands, polar feedback loops)
Albedo (from the Latin albus, meaning “white”) is a surface’s ability to reflect solar radiation. It is expressed as a percentage or a value between 0 (total absorption) and 1 (total reflection).
Albedo=Reflected RadiationIncoming Radiation
Surface | Albedo (Approx.) |
---|---|
Fresh snow | 0.80–0.90 (80–90%) |
Sea ice | 0.50–0.70 |
Sand desert | 0.40 |
Forests | 0.10–0.20 |
Asphalt | 0.05–0.10 |
Ocean (low angle) | <0.10 |
✅ Albedo defines how much sunlight a surface reflects.
✅ Snow and ice have high albedo; oceans and asphalt have low albedo.
✅ It plays a critical role in climate and global warming.
✅ Measured via satellites, sensors, and climate models.
Q: Can we modify albedo to fight climate change?
A: Yes, but with risks. Painting roofs white helps locally, but global techniques (like aerosol injection) are controversial.
Q: Why does water have low albedo if it looks reflective?
A: It reflects strongly only at low angles (e.g., sunset). Normally, it absorbs ~90% of light.
Q: How does pollution affect albedo?
A: Soot on snow (from wildfires or industry) lowers its albedo, speeding up melting.