ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Kelsey Johnson - Astrophysicist, writer, educator
Kelsey Johnson has spent her life in awe of the universe, and she works to inspire that awe in future generations.

Why you should listen

Kelsey Johnson teaches students both inside and outside of the classroom, using astronomy as a "gateway" science to nurture curiosity and support science literacy. Raised by a single mom, Johnson spent countless nights outside under the stars, where she developed a love for "big picture" questions about the nature of reality and the universe. Influenced by her own experience, she founded the Dark Skies, Bright Kids program in 2009 to enhance science education in under-served areas.

Johnson's curiosity about the cosmos -- and everything in it -- has been the primary driver of her career, leading her to devote her life to learning, exploration and teaching. Her research has tackled questions ranging from "How were the most ancient objects in the universe formed?" to "What can the smallest galaxies tell us about the evolution of the universe?" She has also broken new ground teaching, developing nontraditional courses such as "Unsolved Mysteries in the Universe" and "Math and Beauty in the Cosmos." Johnson is a professor at the University of Virginia and the president of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific.

In 2016, Johnson was appointed by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy to the Astronomy and Astrophysics Advisory Committee, and in 2017 she was elected to the board of the American Astronomical Society. Her research has received awards including the NSF CAREER Award, a Packard Fellowship and an NSF Distinguished lectureship, as well as being a Kavli Frontiers of Science Fellow. Johnson has also won several teaching awards, and she was recently named as one of four “ACC Distinguished Professors” in the Atlantic Coast Conference of universities. She received an inaugural "Public Service" award from UVA for her work promoting science literacy

Johnson's writing has appeared in Scientific American, Washington Post, the New York Times, Ms. Magazine and The Chronical of Higher Education. She earned her BA in physics from Carleton College, and her MS and PhD in astrophysics from the University of Colorado. She lives in rural Virginia with her family, including three cats and two very large dogs.

More profile about the speaker
Kelsey Johnson | Speaker | TED.com
TED@NAS

Kelsey Johnson: The problem of light pollution -- and 5 ridiculously easy ways to fix it

Filmed:
1,257,393 views

Ever gaze up at the starry night sky? This stunning view is at risk of disappearing -- unless we act now, says astrophysicist Kelsey Johnson. In this fascinating, unexpectedly funny talk, she explains how light pollution affects almost every species on earth (including us) and shares five "stupidly simple" things you can do to help solve the problem.
- Astrophysicist, writer, educator
Kelsey Johnson has spent her life in awe of the universe, and she works to inspire that awe in future generations. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:13
Unless you've spent quality time
on the International Space Station,
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this is probably not a view
you are super familiar with.
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This is the east coast
of the United States.
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That's New York down there
in the lower right,
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and it's a band of light
all the way up through Washington DC.
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Those cities are shining like jewels,
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highways are traced by webs of light.
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And all of that light is super photogenic.
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But there's a problem.
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That light is meant to be
illuminating our sidewalks,
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and our streets and our houses.
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Instead, it's actually
going up into the sky
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and out into the universe,
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where it's not doing any of us any good.
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When I see photos of this, of the Earth,
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I see environmental catastrophe.
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Those aren't jewels,
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those are tumors.
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I'm an astronomer,
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so it's really no surprise
probably to anyone
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that I've always loved the night sky.
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I'm kind of a walking cliché.
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But when I was growing up in Minnesota,
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one of my favorite things to do
on a summer evening
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was grab my old Raggedy Ann sleeping bag
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and take it out into a field
behind my house,
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where I would spend hours
looking at the night sky.
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And to do this, I had to brave
not only the darkness,
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but also swarms of mosquitoes,
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and my sleeping bag
really didn't smell very good.
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01:41
(Laughter)
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But there was one particular star
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that I would look for, night after night.
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And then I would play this game
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where I would try to focus
on that star so intensely,
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that everything else
would fade from my view
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and that single star
would be all that I could see.
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I could only ever hold on to that focus
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for a few fleeting moments.
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But when I did,
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I felt this deep sense
of connection to the universe.
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02:10
And almost a sense of vertigo,
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like I was going to fall into space.
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And when this happened --
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I know this sounds kind of ridiculous,
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but I would simultaneously feel
unfathomably insignificant
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and also kind of weirdly important.
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That star I looked to
night after night was called Vega.
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Vega is the brightest star
in the constellation Lyra,
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which is not coincidentally
the name of one of my dogs.
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(Laughter)
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But this experience is being lost.
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My favorite constellation, Lyra,
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this is what it would look like
from Manhattan.
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For people who live in urban
and suburban environments,
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if they go outside at night and look up,
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instead of being awestruck
by the majesty of the universe,
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they see pretty much nothing.
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These unremarkable,
completely blank night skies,
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of course are due to all of the light
we produce at night.
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03:14
Those very same lights
we see all the way from space
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are shining up into the atmosphere,
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where they bounce around
and create this featureless smog of light.
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And that featureless
smog of light has a name.
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It's called light pollution.
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As an astronomer,
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I can actually tell
how bad light pollution is
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by the brightness of stars
I can see in the sky.
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And it turns out
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that when you're trying to unlock
the secrets of the cosmos,
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it's really helpful
to be able to see the cosmos.
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And --
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[Laughs]
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Truth.
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And this light that we're trying to detect
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is coming from millions or billions
of light-years away,
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and so it's generally pretty faint.
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And as an astronomer,
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I fight with this every day to do my job,
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and I have to tell you,
it is a really big problem.
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But the problem is far worse
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than just losing some
whimsical ability to gaze at the stars.
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For example,
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countless plant and animal
species are affected.
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So we could talk about sea turtles
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or pollinators
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or any of these super important species
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that are also cute.
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Instead, I want to talk
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about these quietly unassuming dog whelks.
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You may have seen them around
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and not given them
really a whole lot of thought.
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But they're pretty cool.
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So in an entire year
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a dog whelk will rarely move
more than about 10 meters.
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That means that when
they are attacking their prey
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they can hit this brisk pace
of about a millimeter an hour.
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And --
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(Laughter)
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This works out OK,
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because they attack things like barnacles.
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(Laughter)
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So these dog whelks live
in the intertidal area of coasts,
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where, it turns out,
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they're a pretty key part
of the ecosystem.
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Not only are they one of the most
dominant invertebrate predators,
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but other animals, like crabs and birds,
think they're pretty tasty.
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So that leaves these poor snails
in a kind of precarious situation,
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because if they go too low in the water,
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then crabs are a threat,
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but if they come out of the water too far,
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birds are going to have a feast.
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Why is an astronomer
telling you about dog whelks?
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I ask that myself.
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Because their behavior
is impacted by light pollution.
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For example,
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if dog whelks are subjected
to artificial light at night
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they're about twice as likely
to stay under the water with a predator.
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And that puts them at increased risk.
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And it's not like they can make
a speedy escape.
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And so these --
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(Laughter)
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And the other issue
is because they literally move
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at a snail's pace.
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If a population is wiped out,
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it can take decades to replenish.
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And that, in turn, affects
the rest of their ecosystem
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and the other species, like the birds
and the barnacles and the crabs.
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So this is just one
small and slimy example
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of how light pollution
can unleash a cascade effect
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on an entire ecosystem.
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Virtually every species
that has been studied to date
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is impacted by light pollution.
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And that includes humans.
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So let's talk about us.
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You are probably not surprised to hear
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that light pollution can affect
your ability to sleep well at night.
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But you might be surprised to hear
that light pollution is linked to obesity.
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In fact, in a recent study
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they found that light pollution
contributed to over 70 percent
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of the obesity rates in 80 countries.
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More than that,
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light pollution actually contributed
about the same amount to excess weight
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as eating junk food.
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And it gets worse.
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For people who are subjected
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to significant amounts
of artificial light at night
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they're about 50 percent more likely
to get breast cancer.
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And in fact, light pollution
is correlated with types of cancer
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across the board.
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And in controlled lab experiments
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there's a direct link between
increased artificial light at night
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and a rate of tumor growth.
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You might be wondering how normal light
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could possibly impact cancer rates.
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It likely all comes down
to the super important hormone
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called melatonin,
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which we have evolved
over millions of years
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to produce on a day-night cycle,
or a circadian rhythm.
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What happens is that when light impacts
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the retina at the back of our eye at night
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it can disrupt melatonin production,
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and when melatonin
production is disrupted,
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a whole chain of other
chemical processes are affected,
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and that includes estrogen production.
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And when we throw
this chemical balance out of whack,
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really bad things can happen.
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In fact, things are so bad,
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that the International Agency
for Cancer Research
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has said that disrupting
the human circadian rhythm
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is a probable carcinogen.
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Also, for fun, I want to let you know
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that light pollution has been linked to,
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let's see -- headaches, anxiety,
depression, diabetes,
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cardiovascular disease
and the list goes on.
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But maybe you don't care
about your health.
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We're all going to die anyway,
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you might as well die
in a brightly lit room.
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(Laughter)
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The fact that you're laughing
about death is kind of amazing.
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(Laughter)
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You might still care about money.
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The money that's spent
on that wasted light,
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and I mean just the light
that's going out into the universe,
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and not doing us any good,
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is three billion dollars a year.
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That's enough money to build, like,
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1,000 utility-grade windmills,
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or fund the entire DC public-school
system for over two years,
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or -- this is my favorite,
because I really want one
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but I can't afford one --
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buy 30,000 Tesla Model X SUVs.
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(Laughter)
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And that includes
the electric car tax credit.
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And then there are the existential costs.
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I don't have any data
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on how losing touch
with our place in the cosmos
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impacts us.
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But I believe
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that this probably impacts our humanity
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more than any of the other
scary statistics I can share with you.
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And it's getting worse with time.
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The amount of light pollution
is doubling roughly every 35 years.
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That means that within the next decade
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virtually the entire eastern half
of the United States
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will be perpetually brighter
than twilight.
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And there's another issue
with light pollution.
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The problem is way worse
than we can see with our own eyes.
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Our eyes have evolved
to just detect this tiny range
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of the full spectrum of light.
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All of this other light that we can't see,
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this invisible light,
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also has a pollution problem.
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Mostly it's from modern technology,
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things like cell phones
or car-to-car radar,
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or now apparently we need appliances
that can talk to each other.
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All of this modern technology
is putting out strong signals
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that can completely swamp
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this exceedingly faint light
we're trying to detect
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from the rest of the universe
outside Earth,
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which just for the record,
is most of the universe.
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(Laughter)
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And then, there are satellites.
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Satellites are a problem at both
visible and invisible wavelengths.
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A host of private companies have plans
to deploy tens of thousands of satellites
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into Earth orbit,
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where they will not only outnumber,
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literally outnumber
the visible stars in the sky,
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while also beaming
invisible light back to Earth.
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So for astronomers like me,
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who use invisible light
to study the universe,
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it's going to be like staring at the Sun
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and trying to see
a birthday candle behind it.
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Alright, I want to be clear
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that there's nothing inherently wrong
with any of this modern technology.
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With cell phones
or satellites or car radar.
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I'm not sure about kitchen appliances.
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(Laughter)
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I haven't broken down
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and gotten an oven
that talks to my cell phone yet.
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And I use lights at night
like everybody else.
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But here's the thing.
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Some problems in the world,
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like we've heard about today
and you'll hear more about,
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are overwhelming
and they seem intractable.
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Visible light pollution
is not one of these problems.
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This is actually stupidly simple, OK?
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So here are five
super simple things you can do.
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Don't use lights
brighter than you need to.
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Don't use lights when you don't need them.
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Those lights you're using,
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make sure they're shielded down,
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so they're not shining up into the sky.
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And let's talk about LED lights.
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If you have a choice,
don't buy the blue ones.
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Look for words like "warm white."
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If you buy LEDs with words like
"natural light" or "daylight,"
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that's like saying you hate space.
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(Laughter)
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And finally,
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you could advocate for this.
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Even in your local community,
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find out if there's a lighting code
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and whether it could be made
more night-sky friendly.
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Or dare I say, you could even advocate
at the federal level,
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by politely asking our federal officials,
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some of whom may be here,
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to please not auction off
our view of the invisible universe
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12:53
to the highest bidder to pollute at will,
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12:55
which is actually what happens.
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12:57
Now, like a good professor,
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13:00
I have homework for you.
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13:02
If you have never seen
a truly dark night sky,
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I want you to go out
and experience one for yourself.
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13:11
Because if you don't,
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13:13
you don't know what you're missing,
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and you don't know
what humanity is losing.
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Thank you.
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13:21
(Applause)
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3000
Translated by Ivana Korom
Reviewed by Joanna Pietrulewicz

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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Kelsey Johnson - Astrophysicist, writer, educator
Kelsey Johnson has spent her life in awe of the universe, and she works to inspire that awe in future generations.

Why you should listen

Kelsey Johnson teaches students both inside and outside of the classroom, using astronomy as a "gateway" science to nurture curiosity and support science literacy. Raised by a single mom, Johnson spent countless nights outside under the stars, where she developed a love for "big picture" questions about the nature of reality and the universe. Influenced by her own experience, she founded the Dark Skies, Bright Kids program in 2009 to enhance science education in under-served areas.

Johnson's curiosity about the cosmos -- and everything in it -- has been the primary driver of her career, leading her to devote her life to learning, exploration and teaching. Her research has tackled questions ranging from "How were the most ancient objects in the universe formed?" to "What can the smallest galaxies tell us about the evolution of the universe?" She has also broken new ground teaching, developing nontraditional courses such as "Unsolved Mysteries in the Universe" and "Math and Beauty in the Cosmos." Johnson is a professor at the University of Virginia and the president of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific.

In 2016, Johnson was appointed by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy to the Astronomy and Astrophysics Advisory Committee, and in 2017 she was elected to the board of the American Astronomical Society. Her research has received awards including the NSF CAREER Award, a Packard Fellowship and an NSF Distinguished lectureship, as well as being a Kavli Frontiers of Science Fellow. Johnson has also won several teaching awards, and she was recently named as one of four “ACC Distinguished Professors” in the Atlantic Coast Conference of universities. She received an inaugural "Public Service" award from UVA for her work promoting science literacy

Johnson's writing has appeared in Scientific American, Washington Post, the New York Times, Ms. Magazine and The Chronical of Higher Education. She earned her BA in physics from Carleton College, and her MS and PhD in astrophysics from the University of Colorado. She lives in rural Virginia with her family, including three cats and two very large dogs.

More profile about the speaker
Kelsey Johnson | Speaker | TED.com