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Albedo

Imagine Earth wrapped in a mirror. Every surface, from the blinding cap of Arctic ice to the black asphalt of a city street, has a number between 0 and 1. Fresh snow scores a 0.9, flinging 90% of incoming solar energy back to space. The deep ocean scores a mere 0.06, greedily absorbing the sun’s heat like a dark shirt in July.

This math of whiteness governs our climate. The poles stay frozen partly because ice reflects sunlight away, a process called the ice-albedo feedback . It’s a virtuous circle for cold: more ice means more reflection, which means more cold, which means more ice. But when that ice melts, the exposed dark ocean drinks in the heat, accelerating warming and melting yet more ice. The mirror becomes a sponge. Albedo

So the next time you squint at a sun-drenched sidewalk or feel the bite of fresh powder on a ski slope, remember: you are standing on a number. That number is a decision. And the Earth, holding its breath, is waiting to see if we will keep the mirror polished—or let it shatter. Imagine Earth wrapped in a mirror