Not content with just stirring the pot in particle physics, CERN has embarked on an experiment  aimed at addressing whether or not comic rays from deep space might be  seeding clouds in Earth’s atmosphere, influencing climate change. The  early findings are far from deciding the issue of whether climate change  is man made or otherwise, but they have borne some interesting results.  It turns out that cosmic rays could be influencing temperatures on  Earth. Perhaps even more groundbreaking, it turns out they also might  not. Welcome to climate science.
The notion is this: Cosmic rays that we know are bombarding our  planet from the far reaches of space are pelting the atmosphere with  protons, and those protons can ionize some compounds that in turn  condense into aerosols, basically droplets in the atmosphere. Clouds  might in turn build around those droplets, and those clouds shield the  Earth, reducing temperatures.
But our dosing of cosmic rays is dependent on the sun. When the sun is  emitting lots of radiation during high points in the solar cycle, its  magnetic field shields us from some of those cosmic rays. An active sun  spells fewer rays spells fewer clouds, and hence warming temperatures on  Earth.
So, are cosmic rays (or the lack thereof) to blame for our current spate of rising temperatures? Of course/not/maybe.
The experiment at CERN is fabricating the upper atmosphere in the lab  by trapping ultra-pure air and things like water vapor, ozone, ammonia,  and sulphur dioxide in a chamber. They are then bombarding that air  with protons from the same generator that supplies the Large Hadron  Collider. Preliminary results show that these faux cosmic rays indeed  have an effect on the atmosphere: When high energy protons stream in,  production of nanometer-sized particles in the atmosphere increases by  more than ten times.
Case closed. But not really. Those particles that are forming are far  too small to actually seed a cloud. So while CERN has proven that  cosmic rays are definitely influencing the upper atmosphere, the  connection between warming and cosmic rays is far from firmly  established.
Naturally, different scientists are reaching different conclusions,  but all seem to think this experiment is a worthwhile idea, even if it  basically asks more questions than it answers. So, just to recap, the  whole climate change argument has not been put to rest. 
 by "environment clean generations"

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