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Right now, the amount of the carbon dioxide in our environment is hovering at 400 parts per million a number that is already large enough to start affecting our environment. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, meaning that is traps heat within the Earth’s atmosphere. That is why governments around the world are trying to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide put into the atmosphere annually, in the hopes that the planet will not get so warm that parts of the planet become uninhabitable. But what if those reductions do not happen, and instead, everything goes horribly wrong? Looking at a computer model of a world completely covered in water (a simple analog of the earth, which is 71 percent covered by water) Popp and colleagues looked at what would happen if the carbon dioxide levels rose to staggering levels. They found that when the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere reached 1,520 parts per million, temperatures at the surface of the world would reach nearly 135 degrees Fahrenheit, evaporating vast amounts of water into the atmosphere, and sending them high up into the atmosphere, near space. In this scenario, called the “moist greenhouse” in the paper, Popp estimates that water could easily escape from the water world’s atmosphere into space. Worse, the found that once moist greenhouse conditions were reached, they could not be reversed, even by removing the excess carbon dioxide. A similar situation could happen in a few billion years as the sun brightens in the natural course of its evolution, sending out so much more heat and light that the temperature of the Earth’s surface rises, creating a similar moist greenhouse effect. But there is no need to worry right now about whether the world will end in fire on gas. Given the lengthy time scale to reach either situation (millions if not billions of years), these are more geological doomsday scenarios than human ones. Is not that comforting? Which of the following is the restatement of sentence ‘… the planet will not get so warm that parts of the planet become uninhabitable.’ In line 4?

Right now, the amount of the carbon dioxide in our environment is hovering at 400 parts per million a number that is already large enough to start affecting our environment. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas, meaning that is traps heat within the Earth’s atmosphere. That is why governments around the world are trying to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide put into the atmosphere annually, in the hopes that the planet will not get so warm that parts of the planet become uninhabitable. But what if those reductions do not happen, and instead, everything goes horribly wrong?

Looking at a computer model of a world completely covered in water (a simple analog of the earth, which is 71 percent covered by water) Popp and colleagues looked at what would happen if the carbon dioxide levels rose to staggering levels. They found that when the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere reached 1,520 parts per million, temperatures at the surface of the world would reach nearly 135 degrees Fahrenheit, evaporating vast amounts of water into the atmosphere, and sending them high up into the atmosphere, near space. In this scenario, called the “moist greenhouse” in the paper, Popp estimates that water could easily escape from the water world’s atmosphere into space. Worse, the found that once moist greenhouse conditions were reached, they could not be reversed, even by removing the excess carbon dioxide.

A similar situation could happen in a few billion years as the sun brightens in the natural course of its evolution, sending out so much more heat and light that the temperature of the Earth’s surface rises, creating a similar moist greenhouse effect.

But there is no need to worry right now about whether the world will end in fire on gas. Given the lengthy time scale to reach either situation (millions if not billions of years), these are more geological doomsday scenarios than human ones. Is not that comforting?

 

Which of the following is the restatement of sentence ‘… the planet will not get so warm that parts of the planet become uninhabitable.’ In line 4?

  1. People cannot live in parts of the planet if it is too warm

  2. People can live in parts of the planet if it’s too warm

  3. People cannot live in parts of the planet if it is not too warm

  4. The planet is too warm to live in

  5. The planet is warm enough to live in

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D. Yaniar

Master Teacher

Mahasiswa/Alumni UIN Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta

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Pembahasan

Arti kalimat tersebut adalah “…..planet ini tidak akan menjadi begitu panas sehingga tidak bisa dihuni.” Kalimat ini memiliki makna yang sama dengan A. Orang tidak dapat hidup di planet ini jika terlalu panas.

Arti kalimat tersebut adalah “…..planet ini tidak akan menjadi begitu panas sehingga tidak bisa dihuni.” Kalimat ini memiliki makna yang sama dengan A. Orang tidak dapat hidup di planet ini jika terlalu panas.

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